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- Canada Gives - MAKING YOUR LEGACY COUNT
Media Profile in Sources Resource Type: Organization
- Frequently Asked Questions about Sources
Resource Type: Article Published: 2009 SOURCES is a media service that connects journalists, editors, authors and researchers with the sources they need for their work. SOURCES spotlights organizations, institutions, government agencies, companies, and individuals who want to share their expertise and points of view with the media. The SOURCES directory is used by thousands of reporters and researchers who need to find quotable sources and reliable information for their news stories or research.
- Fundraising For Social Change
Resource Type: Book Published: 1988
- Investigating charities: How to search the finances of nonprofits and foundations
Resource Type: Article Published: 2013 Theres good news from the U.S. on a research tool for digging into non-profits and private foundations. Why does this data need to be freed?
- The Revolution Will Not Be Funded
Beyond the Non-Profit Industrial Complex Resource Type: Book Published: 2007
- Riding a wave of economic growth
Asian charities, awash with cash, are filling the gap left by the west Resource Type: Article Published: 2011 Asian charitable organizations have grown in number and capacity in recent years, partly filling the gap left by western organizations and donors that have been crippled by the recession.
- Sources gives you powerful tools to help you stand out from the crowd
Resource Type: Article Published: 2009 An overview of how you can use SOURCES to amplify your message. SOURCES is a media service that connects journalists, editors, writers, producers and researchers with the sources they need for their work. Being included in SOURCES positions you as a media source and puts you in line to receive more media calls and more media coverage.
- Why do Progressive Foundations Give too Little to too Many?
Resource Type: Article Published: 1998 Progressive funders, perhaps driven by the New Left's historic distrust of leadership and hierarchy, are inclined to avoid general-support funding. The natural result is a proliferation of short-term projects attached to flimsy institutions. And inherent in institutional weakness is poor press work, poorly marketed publications, poor management and poorly paid core staff with low morale and high turnover.
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