3 orgs in this cluster's subtree
Every organization with primary activities in Safe Haven Infant Relinquishment Support or any of its descendants. Click a column header to sort. Filter by name or state above the table.
| # | Organization | State | Revenue | Activities ↓ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | NATIONAL SAFE HAVEN ALLIANCE National Safe Haven Alliance (NSHA) is a nonprofit organization founded in 2004 that works to prevent infant abandonment through advocacy, education, and suppo… | AZ | $106K | 9 |
| 2 | ADOPTION SOLUTIONS OF ARIZONA Adoption Solutions of Arizona is a licensed adoption agency providing home study services, safe haven support for newborns, and guidance for birth parents faci… | AZ | $347K | 3 |
| 3 | AGAPE ADOPTION AGENCY OF ARIZONA INC Agape Adoption Agency of Arizona Inc. is a nonprofit organization focused on providing foster care services and support for children in need. They offer traini… | AZ | $1.7M | 2 |
strategies used in this cluster
Theories of action extracted from orgs in this subtree. Click any to see the full set of orgs running the same approach.
- Client-Centered Empowerment 2 orgsBy providing nonjudgmental, personalized support and comprehensive information, individuals make autonomous reproductive decisions, because feeling respected, informed, and emotionally supported increases decisional clarity and engagement with care. This strategy centers on fostering client agency through empathetic listening, dignity-affirming engagement, and tailored education, distinguishing it from directive or medically paternalistic models. While some organizations integrate faith or incentives, the core mechanism across these groups is building trust and self-efficacy to empower choices aligned with personal values—particularly in high-stakes contexts like pregnancy and reproductive health.ADOPTION SOLUTIONS OF ARIZONANATIONAL SAFE HAVEN ALLIANCE
- Faith-Integrated Formation 1 orgBy embedding Christian faith and spiritual practices into personal, professional, and leadership development, we produce transformed individuals and communities, because spiritual formation rooted in divine relationship and biblical truth is the foundation for lasting change and Kingdom impact. This strategy unifies diverse approaches—leadership training, discipleship, scientific inquiry, youth development, and evangelism—through a shared belief that spiritual growth must be deeply integrated with all aspects of life and practice. Unlike strategies that separate spiritual and practical domains, this approach insists on their fusion, using mentorship, prayer, relational community, and theological alignment as levers for holistic transformation across personal, professional, and cultural spheres.AGAPE ADOPTION AGENCY OF ARIZONA INC
- Holistic Youth Development 1 orgBy addressing multiple dimensions of a young person’s life—academic, emotional, social, physical, and familial—organizations produce sustained personal and academic growth, because systemic inequities require comprehensive, long-term support that nurtures the whole individual within their ecosystem. This strategy centers on integrating education, mental and physical health, family engagement, leadership, and skill-building into a unified model of youth development. Unlike narrow interventions that target a single outcome (e.g., tutoring or meals alone), this approach assumes that lasting change emerges from coordinated, long-duration support across interconnected domains. It emphasizes relationship stability, identity formation, and empowerment as core drivers of resilience and upward mobility.AGAPE ADOPTION AGENCY OF ARIZONA INC
- Multi-Sector Collaboration 1 orgBy convening cross-sector partners and community stakeholders, we produce sustained prevention and intervention outcomes, because collaborative alignment across institutions leads to more effective, coordinated, and culturally relevant solutions. This strategy centers on building formal and informal coalitions that integrate schools, law enforcement, families, healthcare providers, and community organizations to address complex social issues like substance use, suicide, and infant abandonment. Unlike top-down or single-entity approaches, it emphasizes shared ownership, distributed expertise, and systemic coordination to close service gaps and increase trust. What distinguishes it is its reliance on collective action as a lever for both immediate crisis response and long-term structural change.NATIONAL SAFE HAVEN ALLIANCE