In-Sight Photography Project

In-Sight Photography Project

BELONGING, COMMUNITY AND EMPOWERMENT THROUGH PHOTOGRAPHY (Winter 2024). In-Sight Photography Project's vision is to be a place where youth (ages 11 to 18) are welcomed to create through the photographic arts, digitally or in the darkroom. To achieve their vision, In-Sight’s mission is to create opportunities where youth can learn photography as an expressive medium and technical skill in a classroom setting that respects the diversity of each student. In all programs at their facility or in partnership with others, In-Sight values using photography to generate belonging, community and empowerment.

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GANGGANG

GANGGANG

CENTERING BEAUTY, EQUITY AND CULTURE (Winter 2024). GANGGANG is a cultural development and creative advocacy firm that works to center beauty, equity and culture in systems and cities, testing new, more equitable models. GANGGANG is moving the global Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) conversation toward that of equity in action, to achieve equity by way of identity and economic justice. We call this cultural reparations: a sustainable movement toward authorship and away from racism by creating new ecosystems that center care and the economic viability of artists.

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Immigrant Legal Services Fund

Immigrant Legal Services Fund

CHANGING LIVES THROUGH IMMIGRANT LEGAL SERVICES (Summer 2023). The mission of the Indianapolis Immigrant Legal Services Fund is to provide equitable access to legal support and representation to immigrant Hoosiers in Marion County. In May 2021, the City-County Council of Indianapolis established the Indianapolis Immigrant Legal Services Fund in partnership with The Indianapolis Foundation, which administers and fundraises for the program that has amassed nearly $660,000 since its inception.

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ACLU of New Hampshire

ACLU of New Hampshire

ADVANCING DUE PROCESS FOR A FAIRER IMMIGRATION SYSTEM (Summer 2023). Around the time the Trump administration launched its attacks on the country’s immigrant communities, an 18-year-old teenager fled her home in El Salvador and journeyed to the U.S. southern border. She was seeking safety and asylum because local authorities in her town were unresponsive to her allegations of domestic physical abuse. She entered the United States only to be deported back to her native country by an immigration judge who, by not providing her with a list of pro bono attorneys, deprived her of the opportunity to assert her claims of physical violence.

Two years later in 2019, she left home again and traveled to the southern border, but an immigration judge denied her claim for asylum. After she appealed the judge’s ruling, ACLU of New Hampshire’s senior staff attorney SangYeob Kim took on her case and represented her subsequent appeal before the Board of Immigration Appeals.

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Second Helpings

Second Helpings

TRANSFORMING LIVES THROUGH CULINARY JOB TRAINING PROGRAM (Winter 2023). For 25 years, Second Helpings in downtown Indianapolis has offered a Culinary Job Training program as part of its mission to transform lives through the power of food. This free, 7-week program is available to unemployed and underemployed adults in central Indiana. Each step in the program’s curriculum is designed to secure employment upon graduation. More than 975 students have graduated from this program since 1998.

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ProsperityME

ProsperityME

EMPOWERMENT THROUGH CULTURAL CONTEXT (Winter 2023). Founded by immigrants in 2009, ProsperityME is dedicated to providing financial empowerment resources and assistance to the New Mainer community. Its mission is to empower, through education and counseling, members of refugee and immigrant communities to invest in themselves to build financial stability, careers, businesses and wealth. ProsperityME provides direct support to the community and offers no-cost educational classroom programs that teach essential financial skills, build confidence and prepare new immigrants to successfully enter the workforce.

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Hyde Square Task Force

Hyde Square Task Force

CREATING CONDITIONS FOR STRONG COMMUNITIES (Fall 2022). Founded in 1991, Hyde Square Task Force (HSTF) began as a coalition of neighbors and community leaders that felt an urgent need to address the growing violence, economic inequality and social unrest facing the residents of the Hyde/Jackson Square neighborhood in Jamaica Plain. Although the livability of what is now recognized as Boston’s Latin Quarter has improved since that time, HSTF’s community continues to be adversely impacted by high poverty levels, community violence and lower educational attainment. HSTF believes communities are strongest when they create the conditions youth need to succeed and thrive. HSTF’s mission is to amplify the power, creativity and voices of youth, connecting them to Afro-Latin culture and heritage so they can create a diverse, vibrant Latin Quarter and build a just, equitable Boston.

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Horizon House

Horizon House

BUILDING FOUNDATIONS TO END HOMELESSNESS (Fall 2022). Horizon House is building the foundations to end homelessness by connecting individuals and families experiencing homelessness with an effective continuum of integrated, comprehensive services that help neighbors secure and sustain income and permanent housing. Services include: Basic Necessities like access to showers, laundry facilities and a place to receive mail; Case Management, including support geared to help those returning to the community from incarceration; Peer Support Services for people coping with mental health and/or substance abuse issues; Street Outreach to engage people who are unsheltered and connect them to housing services; Assessments for rental assistance and housing support services; Supportive Housing Services; and Job Readiness Training. R.I.S.E., Horizon House’s employment services program, helps neighbors Reach for Independence & Self-sufficiency through Employment by assessing employment skills, developing interview and job search skills, providing job leads, transportation assistance and job retention services.

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OUT Maine

OUT Maine

A WELCOMING AND AFFIRMING MAINE (Winter 2022). OUT Maine builds welcoming and affirming communities that support LGBTQ+ youth in all of their intersectional identities. As the only Maine organization that has focused exclusively on queer youth since 1996, it has built a strong expertise in supporting, educating and empowering queer youth. It also is committed to changing the very systems that are failing these youth: schools, health/mental health care, foster care, law enforcement and faith communities.

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Indiana Youth Group

Indiana Youth Group

SAFER SPACES (Winter 2022). Creating safer spaces since 1987, the Indiana Youth Group (IYG) is the longest continually operating LGBTQ+ youth center in the nation. The organization currently serves LGBTQ+ young people ages 12-24, as well as their ally peers. General programming focuses on building self-confidence, self-expression and self-sufficiency while developing relationships within the community.

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Faith in Indiana

Faith in Indiana

BUILDING AN INDIANA THAT WELCOMES EVERYONE (Fall 2021). People with the courage and tenacity to move far from home to make a better life for their family are the ones who make our country the land of the free and the home of the brave. So when immigrants became the target of racist rhetoric, hate crimes and policies aimed at tearing families apart, Faith in Indiana sprang into action.

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Vermont Law School

Vermont Law School

IN PURSUIT OF FULL RIGHTS AND PROTECTION (Fall 2021). The Vermont Immigrant Assistance project (VIA) at Vermont Law School represents immigrants and refugees from around the globe (88 countries to date) and helps people seeking legal status and safety—people fleeing persecution, torture, abuse, war, natural disasters and other unstable or life-threatening situations.

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Political Asylum Immigration Representation

Political Asylum Immigration Representation

JUSTICE, HOPE AND SAFETY (Winter 2021). The immigrant community in Massachusetts is vibrant, full of courageous individuals who have fled torture and abuse with the hope of a fresh start. However, navigating the complex immigration system often requires support and assistance, especially as immigration laws and policy changes have made it more difficult for asylum seekers to win their cases. For asylum seekers who face the risk of deportation, legal representation in their immigration case can mean the difference between a safe new home and a return to persecution. Study after study shows that asylum seekers are five times more likely to win their asylum case if they have an attorney. This is where the Political Asylum Immigration Representation (PAIR) Project makes a difference.

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Cambodian Mutual Assistance Association

Cambodian Mutual Assistance Association

COMMUNITY TRUST IS MORE IMPORTANT THAN EVER (Summer 2020). In the early 1980s, several hundred refugees from Cambodia settled in Lowell, Massachusetts, after escaping from war and genocide in Cambodia. Today, the city is home to the country’s second largest Cambodian population, making up more than a quarter of Lowell’s population. As the Cambodian population put down roots in Lowell, so did the Cambodian Mutual Assistance Association (CMAA).

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