Geoffrey Canada, president and CEO of Harlem Children’s Zone, spoke at Independent Sector last night. He was awarded the 2009 John W. Gardner Leadership Award “in recognition of his groundbreaking success in helping children and families in Central Harlem to break the cycle of generational poverty.” In a word, he is amazing. Visionary, inspirational, entertaining… a model for all of us. His work with the Harlem Children’s Zone exemplifies an approach that is receiving a lot of attention at this conference, and rightly so: we cannot work in silos, attacking a problem from one angle only. To be truly successful, we need to think much more holistically. It’s not just violence, or hunger, or education, or parenting skills… to address big problems, we need big solutions – solutions that address all elements of life in the community we’re trying to serve. One organization can try to do that alone, but it is in partnership with others that the true potential for greatness lies.
Posts Tagged ‘poverty’
Big Problems, Big Solutions
Friday, November 6th, 2009Tags: civic engagement, collaboration, community, education, harlem children's zone, independent sector, parenting skills, poverty
Posted in Civic Engagement and Volunteerism | No Comments »
Independent Sector conference kicks off with an eye towards the future
Wednesday, November 4th, 2009Independent Sector’s 2009 annual conference – “Challenging Times, New Opportunities” – kicked off today in Detroit, Michigan with a thought-provoking panel discussion examining the key trends and opportunities that will define the social sector for the next ten years. The panel was moderated – quite skillfully, given the scope of the topic and the diversity of voices on the panel – by James Canales, CEO of the James Irvine Foundation, with whom La Piana just published a report on the very same topic.
Tags: detroit, hunger, independent sector, james irvine foundation, poverty, social problems, united way worldwide
Posted in NonprofitNext | No Comments »
