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(page 98 of 159)

Chobani Mogul Gives 2,000 Employees Stake in Yogurt Company

Philanthropist and Chobani founder Hamdi Ulukaya announced Tuesday that he is giving all of his full-time workers ownership stakes collectively worth 10 percent of the company, a move that could make some longtime employees millionaires, writes The New York Times.

China Set to Enact Law Restricting Foreign Nonprofits

Amid a campaign by Beijing against unwanted foreign influences, Chinese lawmakers could vote this week for legislation that would give police authority to put overseas nonprofits on a permanent blacklist, The Wall Street Journal writes.

A New Website Serves Up 500 Years of Philanthropic History

The National Philanthropic Trust’s 20th-anniversary project is one of a spate of backward-looking enterprises by giving groups.

Doctors Without Borders Resumes Refugee Rescue Operation

The global aid group relaunched efforts to safeguard people making the dangerous Mediterranean Sea crossing to Europe three months after it suspended the operation and called on the European Union to do more for migrants, the Thomson Reuters Foundation reports.

Prince Was Quiet but Effective Philanthropist, Activist Says

Environmental and human-rights activist Van Jones talks to Rolling Stone about his decade-long philanthropic relationship with the pop, funk, and rock superstar who died last week at age 57. 

Donated Items Can Complicate Disaster Relief, Aid Groups Say

Relief workers who responded to emergencies such as the 2012 Sandy Hook school shooting and the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami tell CBS News about how well-intentioned but superfluous material donations can get in the way of humanitarian efforts.

GiveDirectly Co-Founder Touts Plan for Cash Aid to Poor

NPR talks to Michael Faye, co-founder of GiveDirectly, about the charity’s philosophy favoring cash gifts to poor people over traditional aid programs and its ambitious plan to test the concept by providing a basic income to thousands of East Africans over a decade.

Small Minneapolis Nonprofit Making Big Political Waves

Neighborhoods Organizing for Change has won some big victories on inequality issues and become a major voice in Minnesota politics, reports the Minneapolis Star Tribune.

Founder of African Orphanage Wins Prize in Memory of Armenian Genocide

Marguerite Barankitse, who saved thousands of Burundian children from genocide in the 1990s, was announced Sunday as the winner of the Aurora Prize for Awakening Humanity, an award created in memory of the Armenian genocide, The New York Times reports.

Ford Foundation Head on ‘Time’ List of 100 Influence Leaders

Darren Walker’s moves to steer the country’s second-largest grant maker toward a focus on inequality and inclusion won him a spot on Time magazine’s 2016 list of the world’s most influential people.

Study Looks Into Foundation Interests in Funding Nonprofit News

More than half of philanthropies that financially support nonprofit journalism outlets specify funding for coverage of topics on which they also seek to influence public policy, according to a new American Press Institute report, nonprofit news service Current writes.

Uber Teams With Charity to Recruit Hearing-Impaired Drivers

The effort by the ride-hailing company and the nonprofit Communication Service for the Deaf aims to boost employment opportunities for the hard of hearing, 70 percent of whom are jobless or underemployed nationwide, writes The Washington Post.

More Tex. Students Rely on Food Banks as College Costs Spike

Mirroring a national trend, at least 14 Texas colleges and universities have installed food pantries on campus to meet a growing demand among lower-income students, The Texas Tribune writes.

Staying Healthy While Doing Good: Managing Stress in a Nonprofit Job

Staying Healthy While Doing Good: Managing Stress in a Nonprofit Job

Tips for being productive at the office while preserving work-life balance.

Baltimore Activist Among Winners of Goldman Green Prize

Destiny Watford, a college student who mobilized grass-roots efforts to block construction of a trash incinerator in her South Baltimore neighborhood, was named Monday as one of six 2016 winners of the Goldman Environmental Prize, The Washington Post writes.

Arts Group Gets $20 Million From Ford Foundation and Other Donors

Ford provided $10 million of the new funding to create an operating endowment for United States Artists, a nonprofit that makes unrestricted grants to support accomplished artists in a range of disciplines, reports The New York Times.