organizations
5 orgs in this cluster's subtree
Every organization with primary activities in Native Community Grantmaking or any of its descendants. Click a column header to sort. Filter by name or state above the table.
showing 5 of 5
| # | Organization | State | Revenue | Activities ↓ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | COOK NATIVE AMERICAN MINISTRIES Cook Native American Ministries Foundation is a nonprofit organization dedicated to empowering Native communities through grants and partnerships. They focus o… | AZ | $919K | 4 |
| 2 | FRIENDS OF HUBBELL TRADING POST The Friends of Hubbell is a nonprofit organization dedicated to supporting Native American arts and crafts, providing scholarships to students from various tri… | AZ | $104K | 2 |
| 3 | THE HOPI FOUNDATION The Hopi Foundation is a nonprofit organization focused on enhancing community self-determination and capacity building among the Hopi and Tewa peoples. It ser… | AZ | $1.2M | 2 |
| 4 | THE ARIZONA SPORTS FOUNDATION The Arizona Sports Foundation is an operational organization that hosts the Fiesta Bowl, Guaranteed Rate Bowl, and related events in Arizona. It uses the proce… | AZ | $28.6M | 1 |
| 5 | United Way of Graham and Greenlee C United Way of Graham and Greenlee Counties is a nonprofit organization that has served its community since 1978. It focuses on improving lives by supporting lo… | AZ | $3.3M | 1 |
theories of action
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.
- Culturally Grounded Development 2 orgsBy 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.COOK NATIVE AMERICAN MINISTRIESTHE HOPI FOUNDATION
- 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.FRIENDS OF HUBBELL TRADING POSTUnited Way of Graham and Greenlee C
- Community-Led Systems Change 1 orgBy 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.THE HOPI FOUNDATION
- 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.United Way of Graham and Greenlee C