1 nested activity group
Activity groups nested inside Geospatial Data & Advocacy. Each card links to its own detail page; counts are rolled up through everything nested under that group.
5 orgs in this activity group
Every organization with primary activities in Geospatial Data & Advocacy or any of the groups nested inside it. Click a column header to sort. Filter by name or state above the table.
| # | Organization | State | Revenue | Activities ↓ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | HUMANE BORDERS INC Humane Borders Inc. was established in 2000 to prevent migrant deaths along the Arizona-Mexico border. The organization places and maintains water stations in … | AZ | $261K | 14 |
| 2 | ARIZONA LOCAL POST Arizona Luminaria is a nonprofit newsroom dedicated to community-centered journalism and truly local news in Arizona. It focuses on holding government and powe… | AZ | $267K | 6 |
| 3 | THE NARBHA INSTITUTE INC The NARBHA Institute is a nonprofit organization that advances integrated wellness and health equity in Northern Arizona. It achieves this by inspiring hope, e… | AZ | $8.8M | 6 |
| 4 | EQUALITY HEALTH FOUNDATION The Equality Health Foundation promotes health equity by addressing systemic barriers to healthcare access for culturally diverse and under-resourced communiti… | AZ | $2.0M | 4 |
| 5 | INDIGENOUS VISION Indigenous Vision is a nonprofit organization led by Indigenous women that promotes cultural humility, Indigenous self-care, and social justice through podcast… | AZ | $176K | 2 |
strategies used in this activity group
Approaches extracted from orgs working in this activity group and the groups nested inside it. Click any to see the full set of orgs running the same approach.
- Community-Led Systems Change 2 orgsBy centering community voice, lived experience, and local assets in governance, program design, and investment, organizations produce more equitable, sustainable, and effective outcomes, because solutions rooted in community ownership are better aligned with actual needs and more resilient to external shocks. This strategy unifies approaches that shift power and decision-making to the community level—whether through participatory grantmaking, member governance, co-created services, or culturally rooted programming. It goes beyond service delivery to transform systems by ensuring those most impacted by inequity shape the interventions meant to serve them. What distinguishes it is its foundational belief in community agency as the primary engine of change, rather than an input or beneficiary.ARIZONA LOCAL POSTEQUALITY HEALTH FOUNDATION
- Collaborative Conservation Partnerships 1 orgBy forming cross-sector partnerships and leveraging shared resources, organizations achieve larger-scale and more sustainable conservation outcomes, because collaborative governance increases legitimacy, technical capacity, and local buy-in. This strategy emphasizes joint action across governmental, tribal, nonprofit, and private entities to address complex environmental challenges through pooled expertise, funding, and authority. Unlike top-down or litigation-only approaches, it prioritizes shared decision-making and co-implementation, as seen in landscape-level planning, producer-led initiatives, and tribal-led conservation. It is distinct from unilateral advocacy or direct service models by embedding interdependence and mutual accountability into the theory of change.INDIGENOUS VISION
- Culturally Grounded Development 1 orgBy embedding Indigenous culture, language, and community governance into education and youth programming, we foster identity-affirming development and community resilience, because cultural continuity strengthens engagement, belonging, and self-determination. This strategy centers Indigenous knowledge systems, intergenerational learning, and community-led institutions as foundational to personal and collective well-being. It goes beyond cultural inclusion to assert sovereignty in program design, governance, and pedagogy, distinguishing it from generic youth development models that treat culture as an add-on rather than a core mechanism of change.INDIGENOUS VISION
- Housing as Health 1 orgBy treating stable housing as a clinical and social determinant of health and integrating it with supportive services, organizations improve health, recovery, and self-sufficiency outcomes, because secure housing reduces stress, enables treatment engagement, and interrupts cycles of crisis and system dependency. This strategy positions housing not merely as shelter but as a foundational platform for healing and long-term stability—particularly for individuals with complex behavioral health, medical, or trauma histories. Unlike standalone housing or temporary shelter models, this approach is defined by its integration with healthcare, mental health services, and wraparound supports, grounded in the belief that health outcomes cannot be improved without first addressing the destabilizing effects of homelessness. It is distinct from purely economic or employment-focused self-sufficiency models because it prioritizes physiological and psychological safety as prerequisites to further progrEQUALITY HEALTH FOUNDATION