Find Nonprofits

The Crime Connection, Inc

The Crime Connection, Inc

 The Crime Connection Inc is a nonprofit organization committed to supporting survivors of domestic

Kenneth City, Florida
Community Animal Rescue Effort - C.A.R.E.

Community Animal Rescue Effort - C.A.R.E.

Community Animal Rescue Effort (C.A.R.E.â„¢) is an all-volunteer, nonprofit organization with a mission to serve the communities of Chicago's North Shore by fostering and supporting healthy, positive relationships between people and companion animals. C.A.R.E. rehomes companion pets into safe, healthy, lifelong homes; serves as an educational and counseling resource; and works to reduce pet overpopulation.

Evanston, Illinois
Alma Center, Inc.

Alma Center, Inc.

The Alma Center works to heal, transform and evolve the unresolved pain of trauma that fuels the continuation of cycles of violence, abuse and dysfunction in families and community. We work primarily with men at-risk or involved in the criminal justice system, with a particular focus on men who have a history of domestic violence.

MILWAUKEE, Wisconsin
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Boys & Girls Clubs of Northeast Florida

Making a difference in communities through dedicated service and impact.

Florida
Senior Assistance Center

Senior Assistance Center

To promote the self-sufficiency of all senior citizens and ensure that no senior citizen goes without the necessities of life, including food, shelter and public services.

Denver, Colorado
Golden Gate Cathedral

Golden Gate Cathedral

Making a difference in communities through dedicated service and impact.

Memphis, Tennessee

BLACK WARRIOR RIVERKEEPER INC

Our mission is to protect and restore the Black Warrior River and its tributaries.

BIRMINGHAM, Alabama
We Heart Seattle

We Heart Seattle

We Heart Seattle is an action-based movement dedicated to making Seattle beautiful and safe for all.

Seattle, Washington
GUTTMACHER INSTITUTE INC

GUTTMACHER INSTITUTE INC

Now in its fifth decade, the Guttmacher Institute remains committed to the mission and goals that led to its creation. The Guttmacher Institute was founded in 1968 as the Center for Family Planning Program Development. At the time, Presidents John F. Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson and Richard Nixon had begun to call the public's attention to the problem of unplanned and unwanted childbearing and its consequences for individual women and men, their children and their communities both at home and abroad. Concurrently, the United States Congress was taking its first steps toward the development of an international population assistance program, as well as a multifaceted, national program aimed at providing equitable access to modern methods of birth control in the United States. By integrating nonpartisan social science research, policy analysis and public education, the Center hoped to provide a factual basis for the development of sound governmental policies and for public consideration of the sensitive issues involved in the promotion of reproductive health and rights. This purpose and commitment continue today. The Center was originally housed within the corporate structure of Planned Parenthood Federation of America (PPFA). Its program, however, was independently developed and overseen by a National Advisory Council separate from the PPFA Board of Directors. Its early development was nurtured by Alan F. Guttmacher, an eminent obstetrician-gynecologist, teacher and writer who was PPFA's president for more than a decade until his death in 1974. The Center was renamed in Dr. Guttmacher's memory, and the Guttmacher Institute incorporated as an entirely independent nonprofit policy research institute with its own Board in 1977. The Guttmacher Institute maintains offices in New York and Washington. Its current staff of 81 comprises demographers, social scientists, public policy analysts, editors, writers, communications specialists, and financial and technical personnel. A few of its employees have been with the organization for most of its existence, and an affiliation that goes back 10 or 15 years is not unusual. The Institute's work is guided by a 39-member board made up of eminent professionals from a rich variety of disciplines, as well as civic leaders from across the United States and around the world. The Guttmacher Institute's annual budget of approximately $17 million is derived largely from private foundations, government agencies, multilateral organizations and individual contributions.

New York, New York
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ADABI

Making a difference in communities through dedicated service and impact.

CHINLE, Arizona
UAPPY INC.

UAPPY INC.

Making a difference in communities through dedicated service and impact.

Northport, New York
KINGS HOME

KINGS HOME

For Almost 40 Years, King’s Home has been home to hundreds of youth, women, and children seeking refuge, hope, and help from abuse, neglect, abandonment, homelessness, and other difficult and impoverished conditions and circumstances. Our Purpose: To serve Christ by serving youth, women, and mothers with children who are at-risk.

Chelsea, Alabama