3 orgs in this cluster's subtree
Every organization with primary activities in Legal Resource Development and Pro Bono Coordination or any of its descendants. Click a column header to sort. Filter by name or state above the table.
| # | Organization | State | Revenue | Activities ↓ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | FLORENCE IMMIGRANT AND REFUGEE RIGHTS PROJECT INC The Florence Immigrant & Refugee Rights Project provides free legal services to men, women, and children detained in Arizona for immigration-related issues. Th… | AZ | $16.0M | 5 |
| 2 | Aliento Education Fund Aliento Education Fund is a nonprofit organization based in Arizona that supports students, Dreamers, and immigrant families through education initiatives, art… | AZ | $2.1M | 2 |
| 3 | ARIZONA STATE ESCROW ASSOCIATION The Arizona State Escrow Association (ASEA) is a trade association dedicated to promoting integrity and responsibility in real property settlement transactions… | AZ | $138K | 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.
- 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.Aliento Education Fund
- Pro Bono Capacity Building 1 orgBy recruiting, training, and supporting volunteer legal professionals, organizations expand access to justice for underserved populations, because leveraging pro bono expertise allows scalable delivery of free or low-cost legal services without relying solely on limited public funding. This strategy centers on amplifying legal service capacity through structured engagement of volunteer attorneys and law students, providing them with training, mentorship, malpractice coverage, and administrative support to effectively serve low-income or marginalized clients. While other strategies focus on direct service delivery models or systemic advocacy, this approach specifically addresses the supply-side barrier in civil legal aid—namely, the shortage of available attorneys—by building sustainable pipelines of skilled volunteers. It is distinct from self-help or unbundled services, as it emphasizes professional legal intervention rather than client self-representation, and differs from holisticFLORENCE IMMIGRANT AND REFUGEE RIGHTS PROJECT INC