4 orgs in this cluster's subtree
Every organization with primary activities in Distribution of Essential In-Kind Items for Foster and Kinship Families or any of its descendants. Click a column header to sort. Filter by name or state above the table.
| # | Organization | State | Revenue | Activities ↓ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | BOOST A FOSTER FAMILY INC Operational nonprofit serving kinship foster families in Arizona by providing critical in-kind donations and services to help them meet state licensing require… | AZ | $213K | 5 |
| 2 | KINGMAN LODGE NO 1704 LOYAL ORDER OF MOOSE Fraternal organization operating in Arizona and New Mexico under Moose International, providing social, recreational, and community service activities for memb… | AZ | $482K | 3 |
| 3 | ARIZONA HELPING HANDS The Foster Alliance provides essential needs and support to children in foster care and the families and agencies who care for them. Operating in Arizona and N… | AZ | $6.1M | 2 |
| 4 | Arizona Friends of Foster Children Arizona Friends of Foster Children Foundation (AFFCF) provides financial support for extracurricular, educational, and basic needs expenses for children in fos… | AZ | $5.4M | 1 |
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.
- Essential Needs as Stability 2 orgsBy providing essential household and personal items, organizations increase foster family capacity and child well-being, because meeting basic material needs reduces barriers to licensure, decreases trauma, and creates conditions for emotional and physical stability. This strategy treats tangible, foundational resources—such as beds, furniture, safety equipment, and bicycles—not as luxuries but as critical inputs for systemic stability and personal dignity. It operates on the belief that material security is a prerequisite for emotional well-being, successful foster placements, and long-term self-sufficiency. Unlike broader support models, this approach specifically links the direct provision of physical necessities to measurable outcomes in foster care retention, child development, and family empowerment.ARIZONA HELPING HANDSBOOST A FOSTER FAMILY INC
- Holistic Youth Development 2 orgsBy 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.Arizona Friends of Foster ChildrenBOOST A FOSTER FAMILY INC
- Low-Overhead Impact Maximization 1 orgBy minimizing administrative and operational costs, organizations maximize the proportion of resources directed to programs and beneficiaries, because reducing overhead increases efficiency, transparency, and donor trust, thereby amplifying social impact. This strategy unifies organizations that prioritize financial stewardship and operational leanness—through volunteer-driven staffing, zero-overhead models, endowment earnings use, or shared resource infrastructure—to ensure nearly all funding directly serves mission goals. Unlike broader capacity-building or service delivery strategies, this approach centers cost efficiency as a core theory of change, treating overhead reduction not just as a practice but as a lever for greater accountability, donor confidence, and programmatic scale.BOOST A FOSTER FAMILY INC
- Trauma-Informed Care 1 orgBy creating safe, empowering, and culturally responsive environments that recognize the pervasive impact of trauma, organizations improve engagement, healing, and treatment outcomes, because individuals are more likely to participate in services and regulate emotionally when they feel physically and psychologically safe. This strategy centers on understanding and responding to the biological, psychological, and social effects of trauma across all levels of service delivery. It distinguishes itself from other approaches by prioritizing emotional and physical safety, minimizing re-traumatization (e.g., through restraint-free practices), and embedding principles like trust, choice, and empowerment into organizational culture, staff training, and client interactions. While other strategies may focus on specific services (e.g., housing or peer support), trauma-informed care functions as a foundational lens that shapes how all services are delivered.Arizona Friends of Foster Children