DREAMING FOR A
November 21-23, 2024 | Washington D.C










November 21-23, 2024 | Washington D.C
The O’Neill School of Public and Environmental Affairs at Indiana University is consistently ranked among the nation’s top institutions in public affairs and policy. Recognized by U.S. News & World Report for its leadership in multiple specialty areas, the O’Neill School is the only school in the country to hold the top two spots in a specialty ranking, with O’Neill Bloomington at No. 1 and O’Neill Indianapolis at No. 2 in nonprofit management.
Assistant Professor Shuyi Deng is an expert in nonprofit management and policy, social equity and justice, and policy analysis. Her research focuses on the racial dynamics in the nonprofit sector and the distributional consequences of nonprofits and philanthropy along the lines of race.
Assistant Professor Vernise Estorcien has been named an Emerging Scholar Fund recipient for ARNOVA 2024. The award will support the advancement of her research on public and nonprofit management with a focus on minority youth development.
Ph.D. candidate Shaun Khurana has been awarded ARNOVA’s Lester M. Salamon Memorial Award for Promising Ph.D. Proposal in Nonprofit and Voluntary Action Research. His dissertation studies the effect of nonprofit assistance on administrative burdens experienced by the transgender community.
Assistant Professor Adriana Molina-Garzón’s research has taken her to remote communities across the world, all with the goal of researching climate change and environmental issues in vulnerable communities. Her work focuses on the conditions and arrangements that impact sustainable development in rural areas of low- and middle- income countries.
#2 Master of Public Affairs Top-ranked MPA specialty areas:
Thomas J. Vicino has joined Georgia State University as Dean of the Andrew Young School of Policy Studies.
PREMIUM SPONSORS
Indiana University O’Neill School of Public & Environmental Affairs Bloomington/Indianapolis
Do Good Institute, University of Maryland
Schar School of Policy & Government, George Mason University
School of Public Policy, American University
School of Public Policy, University of Maryland
Trachtenberg School of Public Policy and Public Administration at George Washington University
PLATINUM SPONSORS
Indiana University Lilly Family School of Philanthropy
Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs at Syracuse University University of Pennsylvania School of Social Policy & Practice
GOLD SPONSORS
Austin W. Marxe School of Public and International Affairs, Baruch College CenterforNonprofits&Philanthropy,DepartmentofPublicService&Administration,Bush SchoolofGovernment&PublicService,TexasA&MUniversity
School of Public Policy, University of Connecticut
University of Delaware, Joseph R. Biden, Jr. School of Public Policy and Administration University of North Carolina Wilmington
SILVER SPONSORS
Department of Public Policy, Management, & Analytics (PPMA), University of Illinois Chicago
Evans School of Public Policy and Governance, University of Washington
Hubert H. Humphrey School of Public Affairs - University of Minnesota
Kean University Public Affairs
NC State University - School of Public and International Affairs
Philanthropia - LCC International University, Center for Philanthropy
The University of Texas at Dallas Public and Nonprofit Management Program University of Central Florida School of Public Administration
SUPPORTER SPONSORS
Axelson Center for Nonprofit Management, North Park University
Andrew Young School of Policy Studies, Georgia State University
Jack, Joseph and Morton Mandel School Applied Social Sciences - Case Western Reserve University
John Glenn College of Public Affairs, The Ohio State University
Loyola University Chicago
NYU Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of Public Service
Rutgers University-Camden Department of Public Policy and Administration
School of Public Policy and Administration - Carleton University
School of Public Policy - University of Massachusetts Amherst
The William D. Ruckelshaus Center, Washington State University
University of Oregon School of Planning, Public Policy and Management
University of Pittsburgh, Graduate School of Public and International Affairs
USC Sol Price School of Public Policy
BEVOL
INSTITUTIONS
AmeriCorps
Andrew Young School of Policy Studies Center for Nonprofits & Philanthropy, Bush School at Texas A&M
James Madison University School of Strategic Leadership Studies
INDIVIDUALS
Faculty and research making an impact https://cppp.usc.edu
Office of Research and Evaluation, AmeriCorps RGK Center for Philanthropy & Community Service, University of Texas at Austin University of Maryland University of Missouri - Kansas City, Midwest Center for Nonprofit Leadership.
Celebrating its 25th year, our Center convenes philanthropists, students, scholars and practitioners using research and practice to inform thoughtful decision making to advance public problem solving. Translating research and learning into action, our undergraduate and graduate students emerge better prepared to face complex challenges, and ready to create positive change for individuals and communities.
Dear colleagues,
It is my pleasure and privilege to welcome you to ARNOVA’s 53rd Annual conference in Washington D.C.. This year’s conference theme is “Dreaming for a Bright Nonprofit Future: Policy Making, Technology and Collaboration in a Dynamic Environment” and I am looking forward to many lively discussions about the intersection of public policy and the nonprofit sector.
The ARNOVA conference will take place in the U.S. capitol right after the 2024 U.S. presidential and congressional elections, which have the potential to reshape the U.S. federal government. The timing and setting therefore provide excellent context for us to take a deep dive into the intricate tapestry of government and nonprofit relationships and the role of public policy in shaping the nonprofit sector.
We clearly have an amazing conference ahead of us and many people have worked hard to make it possible. I am grateful to our conference co-chairs, David Campbell, Helen Liu and Julia Carboni who have done a masterful job of organizing the conference. I’m thankful, too, for the support they received from this year’s track chairs, from the ARNOVA staff, and from the many other volunteers who are essential to planning an event of this magnitude.
As I’m sure you are aware, registration fees do not cover all conference expenses, particularly given large increases in both food and technology costs; philanthropic support is critical to keeping ARNOVA financially sound. Thank you to all our conference sponsors and member supporters.
Our Institutional Hosts this year include the Do Good Institute, University of Maryland, Schar School of Policy & Government at George Mason University, the School of Public Policy at American University, the School of Public Policy at University of Maryland and the Trachtenberg School of Public Policy and Public Administration at George Washington University. We are grateful to them and our other sponsors, as well as the Lilly Endowment who provides ongoing financial support to ARNOVA.
As my term as President comes to an end, I’m indebted to many people. The ARNOVA staff have provided incredible support and guidance, including the stellar work of our Executive Director, Lynnette Cook. I thank the ARNOVA Board for their ongoing commitment to our association. I’m so pleased that David Campbell, Paloma Raggo and Kelly LeRoux were re-elected for another term of service. Many thanks to Esi Ansah, Cristina Balboa and Helen Liu for their contributions and commitment as they transition off the Board, and a warm welcome to Jennifer Madden, Tamaki Onishi, and Bok Gyo Jeong as they begin their terms as Board members. Thanks to everyone who ran for a seat on the Board, and thanks to all of you who voted in this year’s elections. Finally, I wish much success to our incoming President, Chao Guo. I’m confident I’m leaving our association in good hands under his leadership.
Enjoy the conference!
Warmly, Emily
Barman
Loyola University
ARNOVA President
to ARNOVA’s 53 rd Annual Conference!
FROM THE ARNOVA CO-CHAIRS
Welcome to ARNOVA’s 2024 annual conference. As for this year’s conference co-chairs, we are grateful that so many of you have chosen to travel to Washington DC to join us. We hope you find that the efforts that so many ARNOVA members and staff have put into planning the conference contribute to an enriching, productive, and enjoyable conference experience for all participants.
The ARNOVA conference takes place in Washington DC right after the 2024 U.S. presidential and congressional elections that have the potential to reshape the U.S. Federal Government. This setting provides a context for us to take a deep dive into the intricate tapestry of government and nonprofit relationships and the role of public policy in shaping the nonprofit sector. Global scholars bring comparative perspective on government-nonprofit relations and the role of nonprofit in policy making in non-US countries. Also, rapid development and adoption of digital technology, such as ChatGPT and other AI-related technology, presents tremendous opportunities and challenges for the nonprofit sector. Scholars offer perspectives to understand the role of this changing technological landscape in the nonprofit sector.
We are pleased that interest in the ARNOVA conference has grown. This year, based on your feedback, we’ve revamped our submission formats based on feedback from our Task Force and members. You can now choose from Individual Papers for completed research, Emergent Research Presentations for works in progress, and One-onOne poster sessions for focused discussions. These changes aim to provide more engaging and diverse opportunities for sharing and receiving feedback on your research.
The number of paper and panel submissions and conference registrations has increased for this year’s conference over the numbers from the past three years. This year’s conference will have a total of 177 sessions planned. We also remain inspired by the work that the ARNOVA board, staff, volunteers, and members have done to prepare for this conference. Specifically, we are grateful to 457 section leaders and members, 31 track chairs, 56 award committee members, and 26 professional development committee members for putting this conference together. These have been hard times for many of us, but we were able to push through and continue to do so together. To all of you: THANK YOU!
It is our hope that this conference provides you with the opportunity to hear about exciting research, connect with colleagues, and that it provides you with a foundation you can use to think about the future of our field and the contribution you can make to it.
ARNOVA is member driven and our success depends on members’ commitment to the Association and this conference. We are deeply grateful for the many ways in which you have continued to support ARNOVA and this conference.
Welcome to ARNOVA 2024!
Julia Carboni, David Campbell & Helen Liu
#ARNOVA24 Conference Co-Chairs
The Association for Research on Nonprofit Organizations and Voluntary Action (ARNOVA) is a leading interdisciplinary community of people dedicated to fostering, through research and education, the creation, application and dissemination of knowledge on nonprofit organizations, philanthropy, civil society and voluntary action. ARNOVA brings together scholars and practitioners from a wide array of disciplines, fields and backgrounds with both theoretical and applied interests in the day-to-day concerns of third-sector organizations and in the improvement of the work of these organizations and quality of life for the people and communities they serve.
This Code of Ethics focuses on the conduct of ARNOVA members as they serve, represent, engage with and interact within the Association. While the Board of Directors of ARNOVA is empowered to act on behalf of the Association’s interests, this code is fundamentally a self-executing ethics document that calls for individual commitment to self-compliance.
Principle 1: Abide by Professional Integrity. ARNOVA members strive to promote honesty, transparency, fairness, and respect for human dignity in the scholarship, teaching, and practice of their profession and to avoid professional misconduct or the perception of misconduct.
Principle 2. Strive for Professional Excellence. ARNOVA members contribute to strengthening individual and collective capabilities and support the effective, professional development of others towards excellence in their work.
Principle 3. Respect and Promote Diversity and Seek to Sustain Inclusion. ARNOVA members acknowledge the diversity of the ARNOVA community as an asset and a value. Members treat others with equity, fairness, and respect and work hard for more inclusion within the Association.
Principle 4. Promote a Welcoming Space. ARNOVA members strive to ensure a welcoming and safe space for those with whom they interact, in person or virtually, during ARNOVA activities and governance. Members do not engage in any form of bullying or harassment.
Principle 5. Uphold Full Transparency and Disclosure. ARNOVA members will not engage in actions that reflect improper conflicts of interests and abuse of power within the Association. Members will disclose any interest (financial or non-financial, individual or institutional, private or public) that might constitute a conflict with and for ARNOVA especially when assuming responsibilities within the Association.
By accepting membership in ARNOVA, members agree to abide by this Code of Ethics.
Reflective of the Code of Ethics, it is the policy of ARNOVA that all participants in ARNOVA activities enjoy an environment free from all forms of harassment, discrimination, bullying, retaliation, and violence (hereafter referred to simply as harassment).
ARNOVA members, staff and event participants are expected to follow the norms of professional respect that are necessary to promote the conditions for free academic interchange.
• Exercise consideration and respect in speech and actions and respect for personal space.
• Refrain from demeaning, discriminatory, or harassing behavior and speech.
Alert the executive director, an ombudsperson, or anti-harassment committee member if you notice a dangerous situation, someone in distress, or violations of this policy, even if they seem inconsequential.
Ombudspersons are available to provide guidance, explain options for reporting harassment, and outline the avenues for pursuing a complaint. They cannot provide legal advice but can offer support and guidance. This consultation is confidential and the details of such a conversation will not be reported to any administrator, office, or committee of ARNOVA, except as required by law. At all times, the role of the Ombudsperson is entirely independent of any reporting one may decide to pursue.
Elizabeth J. Dale, PhD
Associate Professor
Nonprofit Leadership
Seattle University
Office: (206) 296-5484
Email: dalee@seattleu.edu
David O. Renz, Ph.D.
Professor Emeritus of Nonprofit Leadership and Director Emeritus, Midwest Center for Nonprofit Leadership
Henry W. Bloch School of Management
University of Missouri - Kansas City
Phone: 816-797-0878
Email: renzd@umkc.edu
Elaine Jiwon Suh, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor - Department of Public Affairs and Planning College of Architecture, Planning and Public Affairs (CAPPA)
The University of Texas at Arlington Email: jiwon.suh@uta.edu
Please note that this consultation is confidential and the details of such a conversation will not be reported to any administrator, office, or committee of ARNOVA, except as required by law.
You can learn more about our Anti-Harassment policy & Discrimination policy here.
DISTINGUISHED ACHIEVEMENT AND LEADERSHIP IN NONPROFIT AND VOLUNTARY ACTION RESEARCH AWARD
Roseanne Mirabella, Kean University
RGK-ARNOVA PRESIDENT’S AWARD
Cristina M. Balboa, Marxe School of Public and International Affairs, Elisabeth Bloodgood, Concordia University, Dipendra KC, Ritsumeikan Asia Pacific University, Anna Domaradzka, University of Warsaw, Emmanuel Kumi, University of Ghana, Patricia Maria Emerenciano Mendonca, University of São Paulo, Christopher L. Pallas, Kennesaw State University, “A Decolonized Research Approach to Understanding Civil Society’s Fourth Era”
UMD DO GOOD INSTITUTE & ARNOVA GLOBAL PHILANTHROPY AND NONPROFIT LEADERSHIP AWARD
Christopher Einolf, Northern Illinois University, “Structures, Strategies, and Networks of Anti-Torture International Nongovernmental Organizations”
GABRIEL G. RUDNEY MEMORIAL AWARD FOR OUTSTANDING DISSERTATION IN NONPROFIT AND VOLUNTARY ACTION RESEARCH
Hyunrang Han, University of Texas at El Paso, “The Roles, Impacts, and Institutional Characteristics of Grantmaking Foundations Supporting Women’s Causes in the U.S.”
THE LESTER M. SALAMON MEMORIAL AWARD FOR PROMISING PHD PROPOSAL IN NONPROFIT AND VOLUNTARY ACTION RESEARCH
Shaun Khurana, Indiana University-Bloomington, “Cross-Sector Dynamics of Administrative Burden: Legal, Social, and Educational Nonprofit Support in Transgender Health”
OUTSTANDING BOOK IN NONPROFIT AND VOLUNTARY ACTION RESEARCH
Dana Brakman Reiser, Brooklyn Law School, Steven Dean, Boston University School of Law, “For-Profit Philanthropy: Elite Power and the Threat of Limited Liability Companies, Donor-Advised Funds, and Strategic Corporate Giving”
VIRGINIA A. HODGKINSON RESEARCH BOOK PRIZE
Gorgi Krlev, ESCP Business School, Dominika Wruk, University of Mannheim, Giulio Pasi, Universidad Loyola, Marika Bernhard, DFL (German Football League), “Social Economy Science: Transforming the economy and making society more resilient”
OUTSTANDING ARTICLE IN NONPROFIT AND VOLUNTARY SECTOR QUARTERLY (NVSQ) AWARD
Claire Dunning, University of Maryland, “No Strings Attached: Philanthropy, Race, and Donor Control from Black Power to Black Lives Matter” - Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly, 52(1), 29-49.
BEST REVIEWER FOR NONPROFIT AND VOLUNTARY SECTOR QUARTERLY (NVSQ) AWARD
Erynn Beaton, The Ohio State University
BEST 2023 CONFERENCE PAPER AWARD
Simon Shachter, University of Chicago, “City Formations under New Racial Formations: Ethnic Civil Society Networks in the Creation of Portland and Seattle, 18881909”
EDITORS’ PRIZE FOR BEST SCHOLARLY PAPER IN NONPROFIT MANAGEMENT & LEADERSHIP, VOLUME 33
H. Daniel Heist, Brigham Young University, Benjamin F. Cummings, Valley University, Megan M. Farwell, Independent Researcher, Ram Cnaan, University of Pennsylvania and Erinn Andrews, Give Team, “Tubs, Tanks, and Towers: Donor Strategies for DonorAdvised Funds Giving” - Nonprofit Management and Leadership, 33(4), 687-709.
UNDERGRADUATE DIVERSITY SCHOLARS
2024 COHORT
Crystal Nunez, SUNY Cortland
Daniella Marquez, SUNY Cortland
Saniya Jain, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
2023 COHORT
Mirakle Wright, University of Colorado Denver
EMERGING SCHOLARS
Lucia Gomez Teijeiro, University of Geneva / Bern University of Applied Sciences
Mac-Jane Crayton, Appalachian State University
Rafeel Wasif, Portland State University
Vernise Estorcien, Indiana University
DOCTORAL SEMINAR FELLOWS
Codi Smith, University of Pennsylvania
Daniel Zorrilla, University of Delaware
Divya Sethi, Rotterdam School of Management
Maham Ali, The Ohio State University
Megan Hillier-Geisler, IU - Lilly Family School of Philanthropy
Rachel Cash, Indiana University
Ryne Crout Jones, NC State University
Shiqi Peng, University of Hong Kong
Tiana Marrese, University of Pennsylvania
Youjung Song, University at Albany, SUNY
GRADUATE DIVERSITY SCHOLARS
2024 COHORT
Barnabas Suva, James Madison University
Christina Dressel, The Ohio State University
Leticia Tetteh, University of Nebraska Omaha
Massumeh Hosseini Toosi, IU Lilly Family School of Philanthropy
Michael Lee, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Sina Jangjoo, Florida State University
2023 COHORT
Imoleayo Adeyeri, Indiana University Lilly Family School of Philanthropy
Jonathan Wong, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Jung Ho Choi, University of Pennsylvania
Katyayani Strohl, University of Houston
Nallely Manriques, The Nonprofit Institute - University of San Diego
Su Young Choi, University of Georgia
Ranked #9 in Nonprofit Management by U.S. News & World Report
National leaders in the field of nonprofit studies, Glenn College programming attracts interdisciplinary students from across Ohio State’s campus, our curriculum addresses the evolving needs of nonprofit organizations, and our faculty and doctoral students are conducting cutting-edge research on the nonprofit sector and the critical issues that it faces.
OUR EXPERTS:
• Erynn Beaton, Associate Professor
• Megan LePere-Schloop, Associate Professor
• Brian Mittendorf, Courtesy Professor
• Stephanie Moulton, Professor and Associate Dean for Faculty and Research
• Long Tran, Assistant Professor
• Greg Wilson, Assistant Professor — Provost’s Fellow
OFFICERS
President Emily Barman
Loyola University Chicago
President-Elect
Chao Guo
University of Pennsylvania
Secretary Kelly LeRoux
University of Illinois Chicago
Treasurer Margaret F. Sloan
James Madison University
Esi Ansah
Ashesi University
Cristina Balboa
Baruch College, CUNY
David Campbell
Binghamton University
Julia Carboni
Washington State University
Jason Coupet
Georgia State University
Jasmine McGinnis Johnson
The George Washington University
Mirae Kim
George Mason University
Helen Liu
National Taiwan University
Alisa Moldavanova
University of Delaware
Paloma Raggo
Carleton University
Nathaniel Wright
Rutgers University - Camden
Jaclyn Piatak
University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Joanne Carman
University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Secretary Kelly LeRoux (Incumbent)
University of Illinois Chicago
Board Member-At-Large
David Campbell (Incumbent) Binghamton University
Paloma Raggo (Incumbent) Carleton University
Bok Gyo Jeong Kean University
Jennifer Madden Linfield University
Tamaki Onishi UNC Greensboro
Dr. Angela Eikenberry, new Director of the UConn School of Public Policy
Ruodan Zhang Assistant Professor
Specialty Areas: Nonprofit advocacy Volunteerism
Recent co-edited books:
David Garvey Director of Nonprofit Outreach and Adjunct Professor
Specialty Areas: Nonprofit strategic networks
Nonprofit communication
Nonprofit human resources
David Horton Smith • 1971-72
Ivan Scheier • 1972-73
Richard Graham • 1973-74
Ronald Lippitt • 1975-76
Jon Van Til • 1977-78
Louis Zurcher • 1979-80
Clementine Kaufman • 1981-82
James Petersen • 1983-84
Drew Hyman • 1985-86
Delwyn Dyer • 1987-88
Robert Herman • 1989-90
Thomasina Borkman • 1991-92
Richard Steinberg & Kirsten Gronbjerg • 1993-94 (Co-Presidents)
Kathleen McCarthy • 1995-96
Michael O’Neill • 1997-98
Dennis Young • 1999-2000
Elizabeth Boris • 2001-02
Joseph Galeskawicz • 2003-04
David Hammack • 2005-06
Steven Smith • 2007-08
Ram Cnaan • 2009-10
Roseanne Mirabella • 2011-12
Francie Ostrower • 2013-14
Alan Abramson • 2015-16
Mary Tschirhart • 2017-18
Angela Eikenberry • 2019-20
Pier Rogers • 2021-22
It takes a tremendous amount of work on the part of many volunteers to make ARNOVA’s Conference possible each year. We acknowledge here with deep gratitude the contributions of time and talent of the following individuals who served this year.
CONFERENCE CO-CHAIRS
David Campbell, Binghamton University
Helen Liu, National Taiwan University
TRACK CHAIRS
Abhishek Bhati, Bowling Green State University
Aya Okada, Tohoku University
ChiaKo Hung, University of Pennsylvania
Christopher Prentice, University of North Carolina Wilmington
Danbi Seo, Arizona State University
David Suarez, University of Washington
Dyana Mason, University of Oregon
Elizabeth Dale, Grand Valley State University
Emily Nwakpuda, The University of Texas at Arlington
Francisco Santamarina, Joint Legislative Audit and Review Committee (JLARC)
Heather MacIndoe, University of Massachusetts Boston
Jihoon Jeong, Texas A&M International University
Jonathan Oxley, Georgia State University
Kelly Krawczyk, Auburn University
Kerry Kuenzi, University of Wisconsin Green Bay
Marcus Lam, University of San Diego
Megan LePere-Schloop, The Ohio State University
Julia Carboni, Washington State University
Meng-Han Ho, Indiana University Lilly Family School of Philanthropy
Michael Moody, Indiana University Lilly Family School of Philanthropy
Moosa Elayah, Doha Institute for Graduate Studies
Nathan Grasse, Carleton University
Peter Raeymaeckers, University of Antwerp
Philine van Overbeeke, Rotterdam School of Management, Erasmus University
Rachel Fyall, University of Washington
Robert Ressler, Brandeis University
Seongho An, University of Central Florida
Shahrin Upoma, University of Minnesota
Stefanie Ruiz, Clemson University
Teshanee Williams, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Thad Calabrese, New York University
Vernise Estorcien, Indiana University Indianapolis
Mirae Kim, George Mason University
Michael Worth, George Washington University
Alan Abramson, George Mason University
Angela Bies, University of Maryland
Elizabeth Boris, Urban Institute
Jeffrey Moore, Independent Sector
Joannie Tremblay-Boire, University of Maryland
John Ronquillo, University of Maryland
Laura Tomasko, Urban Institute
Leah Kral, Nonprofit Consulting LLC
Lewis Faulk, American University
Luisa Boyarski, Center for Public & Nonprofit Leadership - GTW
Mary Tschirhart, George Washington University
Nathan Dietz, Do Good Institute
Stefan Toepler, George Mason University
Steven Smith, American Political Science Association
Austin W. Marxe School of Public and International Affairs, Baruch College
Biden School of Public Policy and Administration, University of Delaware
Candid
Center for Nonprofits & Philanthropy, Department of Public
Service & Administration, Bush School of Government & Public Service, Texas A&M University
Do Good Institute, University of Maryland
Edward Elgar Publishing
Gerald G. Fox MPA Program at University of North Carolina Charlotte
impala
Indiana University O’Neill School of Public & Environmental Affairs Bloomington/Indianapolis
International Journal of Public Administration IJPA
International Society for Third-Sector Research (ISTR)
Institute for Nonprofit Administration and Research, LSUS
Jack, Joseph and Morton Mandel School Applied Social Sciences - Case Western Reserve University
Kennesaw State University, MPA
Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs at Syracuse University
Nonprofit Leadership Program University of Pennsylvania
Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly (NVSQ)
Schar School of Policy & Government, George Mason University
School of Public Policy, American University
School of Public Policy, University of Connecticut
School of Public Policy, University of Maryland
The Nonprofit Center at La Salle University
VISIT THESE EXHIBITORS DURING THE CONFERENCE
Thursday, November 21 8:00 am – 5:00 pm
Friday, November 22 8:00 am – 5:00 pm Saturday, November 23 8:00 am – 12:00 pm
Trachtenberg School of Public Policy and Public Administration at George Washington University
University of North Carolina Wilmington
Urban Institute
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
Emily Barman, President, Loyola University Chicago
Chao Guo, President-Elect, University of Pennsylvania
Kelly LeRoux, Secretary, University of Illinois Chicago
Margaret Sloan, Treasurer, James Madison University
David A. Campbell, At Large, Binghamton University
Jason Coupet, At Large, Georgia State University
FINANCE & AUDIT COMMITTEE
Margaret Sloan, Chair, James Madison University
Esi Ansah, Ashesi University
Jason Coupet, Georgia State University
Mirae Kim, George Mason University
Emily Barman, Loyola University Chicago
Lynnette Cook (non-voting), ARNOVA
Advisory Group
Elizabeth Searing, University of Texas at Dallas
Cleopatra Charles, Rutgers University
CONFERENCE COMMITTEE
David Campbell, Co-Chair, Binghamton University
Helen Liu, Co-Chair, National Taiwan University
Julia Carboni, Co-Chair, Washington State University
NOMINATIONS COMMITTEE
Esi Ansah, Co-Chair, Ashesi University
Emily Barman, Co-Chair, Loyola University Chicago
B. Kathleen Gallagher, Texas Tech University
Travis Ruddle, Brigham Young University
Lynnette Cook (non-voting), ARNOVA
DEVELOPMENT COMMITTEE
Jason Coupet, Co-Chair, Georgia State University
Chao Guo, Co-Chair, University of Pennsylvania
Judy Freiwirth, Nonprofit Solutions Associates
Meng Ye, Georgia State University
MEMBERSHIP COMMITTEE
Mirae Kim, Co-Chair, George Mason University
Alisa Moldavanova, Co-Chair, University of Delaware
Keratiloe Mogotsi, ACPSI
Ming Xie, West Texas A&M University
Tamaki Onishi, University of North Carolina at Greensboro
Zeeshan Noor, Indiana University
Section rep: Seth Meyer, Bridgewater State University
Section rep: Roseanne Mirabella , Kean University
PUBLICATIONS COMMITTEE
Paloma Raggo, Co-Chair, Carleton University
Huafang Li, Co-Chair, Grand Valley State University
Ellie Heng Qu, Texas A&M University
Erynn Beaton, Ohio State University
Gemma Donnelly-Cox, Trinity College Dublin
Khaldoun AbouAssi, American University
DIVERSITY COMMITTEE
Julia Carboni, Co-Chair, Washington State University
Kelly LeRoux, Co-Chair, University of Illinois Chicago
Bok Gyo Jeong, Kean University
Duchess Humphrey, Tarrant County Public Health
Elizabeth Dale, Seattle University
Jiwon Suh, UT Arlington
Keratiloe Mogotsi, ACPSI
Raymond Adibe, University of Nigeria
Tamaki Onishi, UNC Greensboro
Zakhar Berkovich, University at Albany
RESEARCH AWARDS COMMITTEE
Paloma Raggo, Co-Chair, Carleton University
Joannie Tremblay-Boire, Co-Chair, University of Maryland, College Park
PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT COMMITTEE
Jasmine McGinnis Johnson, Co-Chair, The George Washington University
Robert Ressler, Co-Chair, Brandeis University
ANTI-HARASSMENT COMMITTEE
Cristina Balboa, Chair, City University of New York
Tamaki Onishi, UNC Greensboro
Nuno Themudo, University of Pittsburgh
Seth Meyer, Bridgewater State University
Tan Madhavan, GivingTuesday
Located in the Washington, D.C., area, the Schar School of Policy and Government at George Mason University sits in the heart of where policy happens.
The Schar School’s Nonprofit Policy Forum, an open-access journal focused on public policy issues critical to the work of nonprofit organizations, is edited by MPA faculty Alan Abramson, Mirae Kim, and Stefan Toepler.
Featured Programs
•Master of Public Administration
•Master of Public Policy
•Graduate Certificates: Emergency Management and Homeland Security, Nonprofit Management, Public Management
Key Rankings
Source: U.S. News & World Report No. 4 for Homeland Security and Emergency Management No. 13 for Nonprofit Management No. 24 for Public Finance
Come join the Schar School for a sponsored conference reception on Friday, November 22, between 6:30-7:30 p.m.!
Alan Abramson Professor Director of the Center on Nonprofits, Philanthropy, and Social Enterprise
Mirae Kim Associate Professor Director, Master of Public Administration Program
Monroe-White Associate Professor
George Mason University
Schar School of Policy and Government
DISTINGUISHED ACHIEVEMENT AND LEADERSHIP IN NONPROFIT AND VOLUNTARY ACTION RESEARCH AWARD
Emily Barman, Chair, President, Loyola University Chicago
Jennifer Madden, Carthage College
Jessica Word, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Michael Moody, Dorothy A. Johnson Center for Philanthropy @ Grand Valley State University
BOOK AWARDS
Claire Dunning, Co-Chair, University of Maryland
Ian Murray, Co-chair, The University of Western Australia
Howard Lune, Hunter College, Department of Sociology
Tamaki Onishi, University of North Carolina at Greensboro
Giedre Lideikyte-Huber, University of St Gallen
Gregory Saxton, York University
Sabith Khan, Virginia Tech
Cindy Lott, Indiana University
THE PETER DOBKIN HALL HISTORY OF PHILANTHROPY BOOK PRIZE
Billie Sandberg, Chair, Portland State University
Shariq Siddiqui, MPI, IUPUI - Lilly Family School of Philanthropy
Jon Dean, Sheffield Hallam University
Jamie Levine Daniel, New York University
BEST 2023 CONFERENCE PAPER AWARD
Yuan Cheng, Chair, Humphrey School of Public Affairs, University of Minnesota
Mark Hager, Arizona State University
Jeongyoon Lee, University of Kentucky
Meng-Han Ho, National Central University, Taiwan
Shuyi Deng, Indiana University
GABRIEL G. RUDNEY MEMORIAL AWARD FOR OUTSTANDING DISSERTATION IN NONPROFIT AND VOLUNTARY ACTION RESEARCH
Bok Gyo Jeong, Kean University
Roseanne Mirabella, Kean University
Wanzhu Shi, University of North Florida
Jiwon Suh, University of Texas at Arlington
Seth Meyer, Bridgewater State University
THE LESTER M. SALAMON MEMORIAL AWARD FOR PROMISING PHD PROPOSAL IN NONPROFIT AND VOLUNTARY ACTION RESEARCH
Nathaniel Wright, Rutgers University-Camden
Vernise Estorcien, Paul H. O’Neill School of Public and Environmental Affairs
Teshanee Williams, Robert W. Bradshaw Jr. Distinguished Term
B. Kathleen Gallagher, Texas Tech University
OUTSTANDING ARTICLE IN NONPROFIT AND VOLUNTARY SECTOR QUARTERLY (NVSQ)
Joanne Carman, UNC Charlotte
Jaclyn Piatak, UNC Charlotte
Tracey Coule, Chair, Sheffield Hallam University
Brenda Bushouse, University of Massachusetts Amherst
René Bekkers, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Young-joo Lee, University of Central Florida
Angela Eikenberry, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Marcus Lam, University of San Diego
Sophia Fu, Rutgers University
BEST REVIEWER FOR NONPROFIT AND VOLUNTARY SECTOR QUARTERLY (NVSQ)
Joanne Carman, UNC Charlotte
Jaclyn Piatak, UNC Charlotte
RGK-ARNOVA PRESIDENT’S AWARD
Beth Gazley, Chair, Indiana University
Alan Abramson, George Mason University
Richard Clerkin, University of North Carolina-Wilmington
Lili Wang, Arizona State University
Kim Wiley, University of Florida
UMD DO GOOD INSTITUTE & ARNOVA GLOBAL PHILANTHROPY AND NONPROFIT LEADERSHIP AWARD
Catherine Herrold, Chair, Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs - Syracuse University
Georg von Schnurbein, University of Basel
Michal Almog Bar, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Long Tran, The Ohio State University
EMERGING SCHOLARS FUND
Andrew David Omona, Co-chair, Uganda Christian University
Chao Zhang, Sun Yat sen University
Hanjin Mao, University of Houston-Downtown
Hui Li, University of Hong Kong
Kristina Marty, Binghamton University
DOCTORAL FELLOWSHIP PROGRAM
Rebecca Nesbit, Chair, University of Georgia - Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly (NVSQ)
Sarah Young, Kennesaw University
Thad Calabrese, NYU Wagner Graduate School of Public Service
Georg von Schnurbein, University of Basel
GRADUATE DIVERSITY SCHOLARS & LEADERS
PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT WORKSHOP
Jennifer Wade-Berg, Co-chair, Kennesaw State University
Pier Rogers, Co-chair, North Park University
Mac-Jane Crayton, Appalachian State University
UNDERGRADUATE DIVERSITY SCHOLARS & LEADERS PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT WORKSHOP
J. Brandon Philips, Co-chair, California State University, East Bay
Angela Logan, Co-chair, Notre Dame University
Meng-Han Ho, Indiana University Lilly Family School of Philanthropy
Abdul Samad, IU Lilly Family School of Philanthropy University
Honey Minkowitz, University of Nebraska Omaha
EMERGING SCHOLARS PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT WORKSHOPS COMMITTEE
Danbi Seo, Co-Chair, Arizona State University
Rachel Fyall, Co-Chair, University of Washington
Amina Sillah, Towson University
Yuan (Daniel) Cheng, Humphrey School of Public Affairs, University of Minnesota
Peter Weber, Auburn University
Yuha Jung, University of Kentucky
Lauren Azevedo, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
For 90 years, American University's School of Public Affairs has excelled in scholarship, teaching, and leadership -- and we're just getting started.
RANKINGS US News and World Report 2024
Tianyu Chen
PhD Candidate
His research interests include public and nonprofit management, natural language processing and machine learning. 4
OVERALL 13TH PUBLIC MANAGEMENT & LEADERSHIP 4 4 TH NONPROFIT MANAGEMENT TH PROUD OF OUR FACULTY!
Victoria Hunter Gibney
PhD Candidate
Her research interests include material hardship and antipoverty policies and the effect these policies have on families and children.
Kathryn Grossman
PhD Candidate
Her research interests include public and nonprofit management and education policy. She is a qualitative research specialist with an interest in producing mixed methods research.
Will Prince
PhD Candidate
His research interests include public personnel management, citizen-government relationships, and organization theory.
Khaldoun AbouAssi
Provost Associate Professor
Associate Editor of Public Administration Review
Lewis Faulk
Associate Professor Editor of Nonprofit Management & Leadership
Assessing Undergraduate Nonprofit Management Education Programs: Combining Industry and Student Perspectives
Benjamin Walworth, University of Arkansas
Cada Guaraguao Tiene Su Pitirre: A Case Study of Taller Puertorriqueño’s Perseverance
Julie Goodman, Drexel University; Esteban Reina-Soto, Drexel University
Developing a Technology Inventory for (and With) MSW Students: A Tool For Participatory Exploration
Jamie Borgan, City University of New York; Ian Williams, CUNY Graduate Center
Effect of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act Policies on Employee Satisfaction
Zerrouk Bessa, James Madison University
Equity practices in Canadian charitable and nonprofit organizations: Real or a Mirage?
Imoleayo Adeyeri, IU Indianapolis
Explore the Comprehensive Accountability of Community Colleges to the Perceived Effectiveness of Student Goal Attainment
Yu Wang, James Madison University
Exploring Philanthropy-Based College Assignments: An Experimental Study on Community Engagement Impact
Mac-Jane Crayton, Appalachian State University; Molly Di Rienzo, Appalachian State University; Sydney Iannelli, Appalachian State University
Exploring the Influence of Black American Collectivism on Justice Work at Urban Community Centers
Falen Pope, IU Indianapolis
Impact of Fundraising Techniques on Donor Relationships and Nonprofit Sustainability: A Qualitative Analysis
Tahmina Afroz, Upwardly Global
Refugeetude and Philanthropy: A Case of Securitization
Iman Fathima Sheik Abdullah, IU Indianapolis
Representation and Arts Participation: Examining the Role of Diverse Leaders & Relatable Object Labels
Alexandra Olivares, The Mint Museum; Jaclyn Piatak, University of North Carolina Charlotte
Friday, November 22nd 8:00 am – 9:00 am
The Amish in the era of digital government and the roles of Nonprofit Organizations
Chanyoung Han, The University of Texas Dallas
The Association Between Federally Qualified Healthcare Centers’ Utilization of Telemedicine and Immunization and Screening Rates
Abdulrahman Alsulami, University of San Diego; Marcus Lam, University of San Diego, School of Leadership and Education Sciences
The Charity Insights Canada Project: A Rapid-Respond Survey Methodology
Paloma Raggo, Carleton University; Callie Mathieson, Carleton University
The Effect of Social Media Capital on Nonprofit Organizational Performance
Gregory Saxton, York University; Daniel Neely, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee; Chao Guo, University of Pennsylvania; Michelle Benson, University at Buffalo, SUNY; Tahmina Ahmed, Niagara University
The Role of Collective Board Members’ Social Capital on the Financial Performance of Non-Profit Organization
Barnabas Suva, James Madison University
The Voices Of The Future: How Youth Can Inform Decision-Making
Raine McAngus, Arizona State University; Anne Kotleba, Arizona State University; Christina Coleman, Arizona State University
Trends in the Number of Volunteers and Factors Contributing to the Participation in 2011 disasters
Akiko Iizuka, Utsunomiya University
Unlocking AI Potential: Insights from Non-Profit AI Literacy Programs and Policy Frameworks in the U.S.
Nathaniel Nyarko-Debrah, Wayne State University; Sajjad Ahamed, Wayne State University
What Makes a Difference: Factors Influencing Nonprofit Hospitals’ Provisions of Community Benefits
Yinman Zhong, North Carolina State University
Why I Got Involved: Case Study on Civil Activities in Post Disaster Areas
Zhou Yuqin, Tohoku University
ASSISTANT PROFESSOR
PROFESSOR & ARNOVA BOARD SECRETARY KELLY LEROUX
AUSTIN W. MARXE SCHOOL OF PUBLIC AND INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS
IN CELEBRATION OF OUR 30TH ANNIVERSARY AND OUR COMMITMENT TO ADVANCING PUBLIC SERVICE EDUCATION
DIFFERENT LANGUAGES SPOKEN BY MARXE STUDENTS (NOT INCLUDING ENGLISH)*
DIFFERENT COUNTRIES REPRESENTED BY MARXE STUDENTS (NOT INCLUDING U.S.)*
All sessions will take place in rooms located throughout The Westin Washington DC Downtown. Check the detailed schedule portion of the program for specific room locations.
WEDNESDAY, Nov 20
8:00 am - 5:00 pm Doctoral Fellowship Seminars (by Invitation)
11:00 am - 4:00 pm ARNOVA Board of Directors Meeting
1:00 pm - 6:00 pm Pre-Conference Session: Community Engaged Research: working with community members to enhance research and its impact on the community
2:00 pm - 3:30 pm Pre-Conference Session: Federal Support for Research on the Nonprofit Sector
2:00 pm - 6:00 pm Conference Registration Open
2:00 pm - 8:00 pm Diversity Scholars & Leaders Professional Development Programs (by Invitation)
4:30 pm - 6:00 pm Pre-Conference Session: Capitol Conversations
THURSDAY, Nov 21
7:30 am - 5:30 pm Registration Open
8:00 am - 5:00 pm Exhibits Open (Continental breakfast available)
8:30 am - 9:45 am Opening Plenary Session: “Nonprofits and Public Policy: Shaping Change at the International, National, and State Levels”
10:30 am - 12:00 pm Concurrent Sessions A
11:45 pm - 1:00 pm Networking Break: Lunch will not be provided; grab a colleague and a bite to eat at the hotel restaurant or nearby locations!
1:00 pm - 1:45 pm Membership Meeting
2:00 pm - 3:00 pm Concurrent Sessions B
3:30 pm - 4:30 pm Concurrent Sessions C
4:45 pm - 6:45 pm Section & CIGs Business Meetings * check the detailed schedule for specific times
6:00 pm - 7:00 pm ARNOVA Reception
FRIDAY, Nov 22
7:30 - 5:30 pm Registration Open
8:00 am - 5:00 pm Exhibits Open
8:00 am - 6:00 pmHeadshot Lounge
8:00 am - 9:00 am Poster Session (Continental breakfast available)
9:00 am - 10:30 am Concurrent Sessions D
11:00 am - 12:00 pmConcurrent Sessions E
12:15 pm - 1:45 pm Awards Luncheon
2:00 pm - 3:30 pm Concurrent Sessions F
4:00 pm - 5:30 pm Concurrent Sessions G
5:45 pm - 6:45 pm Section & CIGs Business Meetings
6:30 pm - 7:30 pm Sponsors Receptions
SATURDAY, Nov 23
8:00 am - 10:00 am Coffee Break in Exhibit Area
8:00 am - 12:00 pm Registration Open
8:00 am - 11:00 am Exhibits Open
9:00 am - 10:30 am Concurrent Sessions H
11:00 am - 12:30 pmConcurrent Sessions I
1:00 am - 4:00 pm ARNOVA Board of Directors Meeting
As New Jersey’s urban research university, Kean is proud of our faculty members in the Association for Research on Nonprofit Organizations and Voluntary Action (ARNOVA). Their dedication to nonprofit organizations, education and research is crucial to enhancing community engagement programs worldwide. Congratulations!
Roseanne M. Mirabella, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
• Co-editor of the Handbook of Critical Perspectives on Nonprofit Organizing and Voluntary Action, the first major survey of critical scholarship within the field
• Former President of ARNOVA and the New Jersey Chapter of the American Society for Public Administration (ASPA)
• Member of the leadership team within the Critical Perspectives Section of ARNOVA
• Research focuses on philanthropy, nonprofit education and critical perspectives on nonprofit organizing
Bok Gyo Jeong, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
• Newly elected to the ARNOVA Board
• Served as a representative for the Global Issues and Transnational Action (GITA) group
• President of Korean Nonprofit and Philanthropy Researchers Network
• Research focuses on social enterprise, social justice/DEI, comparative civil society and international development
Greg Witkowski, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
• Book series editor for Philanthropy, Nonprofit and Nongovernmental Organizations
• Research focuses on disaster management, place-based giving, history and civil society
David Birdsell, Ph.D. Provost, SVP for Academic Affairs
Claire Yun, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
Yeonkyung Kim, Ph.D. Assistant Professor
Carey Brown, Ed.D. Equity in Action Presidential Fellow
Ngoc Dao, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
Common Interest Groups encourage groups of individuals to come together in an organic and flexible way around shared intellectual topics or professional concerns. These groups can be created for the purpose of networking, exchange of information, development of new fields of investigation or around other emerging opportunities.
Climate Change and Civil Society Common Interest Group
Diasporic and Bi-cultural Cross-border Philanthropy Common Interest Group
Donor Advised Funds Common Interest Group
Global Issue and Transnational Actors (GITA) Common Interest Group
Korean Nonprofit and Philanthropy Researchers Network (KNPRN) Common Interest Group
NP3 Common Interest Group
Climate Change and Civil Society Common Interest Group Meeting Friday, November 22 | 5:45 – 6:45 PM | Meeting Room 8
Diasporic and Bi-cultural Cross-border Philanthropy CIG Meeting Thursday, November 21 | 5:00 PM - 7:00 PM | Meeting Room 6
Donor Advised Funds Common Interest Group Meeting
Thursday, November 21 4:45 – 5:45 PM – Meeting Room 13
GITA Membership Meeting
Friday, November 22 | 5:45 – 6:45 PM | Meeting Room 2 GITA members will discuss annual events; members’ news update; future planning
Muslim Philanthropy and Civil Society Common Interest Group
KNPRN Business Meeting
Thursday, November 21 4:45 – 5:45 PM – Meeting Room 15
NP3 Common Interest Group Meeting
Thursday, November 21 4:45 – 5:45 PM – Meeting Room 8
Muslim Philanthropy and Civil Society Common Interest Group Dinner
Thursday, November 21 7:00 – 10:00 PM – Busboys and Poets, 450 K St NW, Washington, DC 20001
The Muslim Philanthropy and Civil Society Common Interest Group of ARNOVA’s Annual Dinner & Business Meeting will be held on Thursday, November 21, 2024, from 7:00 PM to 9:30 PM (ET) at Busboys and Poets restaurant, located at 450 K St NW, Washington, DC 20001. The venue is approximately a 10-minute walk from the conference hotel! The event is limited to 40 participants, and RSVP is required by October 31, 2024. Please RSVP using the following link: tinyurl.com/MPCSCIG2024
Additionally, if you have questions about a CIG, you will find the contact person’s information below.
NEW - Arts & Culture Common Interest Group
ARNOVA NP3 Common Interest Group
Mirae Kim, PhD
George Mason University mkim216@gmu.edu
Lindsey L. Evans, Ph.D.
Virginia Commonwealth University EvansLL@vcu.edu
Wendy Chen, Ph.D.
Texas Tech University wendy.chen@ttu.edu
Civil Society in the Middle East Common Interest Group
Climate Change and Civil Society Common Interest Group
Dr. Michal Almog-Bar, Co-Chair, Communications Liaison The Hebrew University of Jerusalem michal.bar@mail.huji.ac.il
Dr. Catherine Herrold, Co- Chair, Communications Liaison Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs Syracuse University cherrold@iupui.edu
Aseem Prakash University of Washington, Seattle aseem@uw.edu
Chao Guo University of Pennsylvania chaoguo@sp2.upenn.edu
Collective Efforts to Advance Research on Civil Society and Philanthropy in Asia
Diasporic and Bi-cultural Cross-border Philanthropy Common Interest Group
Donor-Advised Funds (DAFs) Common Interest Group
Helen K. Liu
National Taiwan University helenliv4@gmail.com
Tamaki Onishi University of North Carolina at Greensboro t_onishi@uncg.edu
Dr. Malika Ouacha Rotterdam School of Management, Erasmus University ouacha@rsm.nl
Viviana Chiu Sik Wu University of Massachusetts Amherst vivianachius@umass.edu
Chengxin Xu, Co-Chair Seattle University cxu1@seattleu.edu
Emerging Scholars on Chinese Nonprofit Research (ESCN)
Yinglin Ma, Co-Chair Ohio State University ma.1479@buckeyemail.osu.edu
Huafang Li, PhD., Vice Chair Grand Valley State University lih@gvsu.edu
Global Issue and Transnational Actors (GITA) Common Interest Group
Bok Gyo Jeong Kean University bjeong@kean.edu
Humanities Common Interest Group
Gregory Witkowski, Chair, Communications Liaison Columbia University gw2367@columbia.edu
Korean Nonprofit and Philanthropy Researchers Network (KNPRN) Common Interest Group
Bok Gyo Jeong, President Kean University bjeong@kean.edu
Brian Byung Min, Vice President Wayne State University bhmin@wayne.edu
Eunsil Yoo, Treasurer & Secretary University of Central Florida eunsil.yoo@ucf.edu
LGBTQIA Common Interest Group
Message Strategy Common Interest Group
Matt Ripper, Co-Chair Siena Heights University mripper@sienaheights.edu
Judith Millesen, Co-Chair College of Charleston millesenjl@cofc.edu
Aya Okada, Co-Chair Graduate School of Information Sciences at Tohoku University (Japan) aya.okada.e3@tohoku.ac.jp
Ruth Hansen, Co-Chair University of Wisconsin - Whitewater hansenru@uww.edu
Muslim Philanthropy and Civil Society Common Interest Group
Researchers Interested in Grant Making Activities (RIGA) Common Interest Group
Zeeshan Noor, Co-Chair University of Texas at Dallas zeeshan.noor@utdallas.edu
Hourie Tafech, Co-Chair Rutgers University hourie.tafech@gmail.com
Laurie E. Paarlberg, Communications Liaison
Robert H. and Judy L. Allen Professorship Bush School of Government and Public Service
Texas A & M University lpaarlbe@indiana.edu
Community and Grassroots Associations (CGA) Section
Community and Grassroots Associations Section Business Meeting
Thursday, November 21 | 4:45 – 5:45 PM | Meeting Room 12
Dr. Stephanie Boddie (Chair) will be sharing section activities with CGA members.
CGA
CPS
Community and Grassroots Associations Section Dinner
Thursday, November 21 | 7:30 – 10:00 PM | REREN (Chinatown), 817 7th St. NW, Washington, DC Free Appetizers will be provided.
CGA Colloquium: Celebrating the Research and Civic Impact of Political Science Professor John DiIulio, Jr. Colloquium | Friday, November 22, 2024: 2:00 PM - 3:30 PM | Meeting Room 13
Critical Perspectives Section (CPS)
Critical Perspectives Section: Transforming Education and Knowledge into Power for a Brighter Nonprofit Future Panel | Thursday, November 21, 2024: 10:00 AM - 11:30 AM | Meeting Room 7
Critical Perspectives Section PDW: Navigating Higher Education in Turbulent Times
Professional Development Workshop | Thursday, November 21, 2024: 3:30 PM - 4:30 PM | Meeting Room 10
Critical Perspectives Section Membership Meeting
Thursday, November 21 | 4:45 – 5:45 PM | Meeting Room 11
Host: Critical Perspectives Section; Purpose: Section business meeting with membership
Data Analytics Section (DAS)
DAS
ESS
Integrating Generative AI into Nonprofit Research: Examples, Best Practices, and Ethical Considerations Colloquium | Friday, November 22, 2024: 2:00 PM - 3:30 PM | Rock Creek A
Early Scholars Section
ESS Colloquium: A Guided Tour: From a PhD Student to an Assistant Professor Colloquium | Friday, November 22, 2024: 4:00 PM - 5:30 PM | Meeting Room 5
Early Scholars Section Annual 3-Minute Dissertation Competition
Friday, November 22, 2024: 5:30 PM - 6:30 PM | Meeting Room 5
Governance Section
Power Dynamics in Nonprofit Governance: Recognition, Resistance, and Redistribution Sponsored by the Governance Section
Colloquium | Thursday, November 21, 2024: 10:00 AM - 11:30 AM | Meeting Room 12
NPFFM
ARNOVA Governance Section Annual Meeting
Thursday, November 21 | 4:45 – 5:45 PM | Meeting Room 16
Governance Section Annual meeting - to summarize accomplishments of the year and plan activities for 2025
Governance Section Sponsored Networking Dinner
Thursday, November 21 | 7:00 – 9:00 PM | City Tap Kitchen & Craft, Penn Quarter, 901 9th Street, NW, Washington DC 20001
Nonprofit Finance and Financial Management (NPFFM)
NPFFM Section Panel: Resiliency Following Hardship
Panel | Thursday, November 21, 2024: 2:00 PM - 3:00 PM | Meeting Room 5
Nonprofit Finance and Financial Management Membership Meeting
Thursday, November 21 | 4:45 – 5:45 PM | Meeting Room 9
Social Entrepreneurship/Enterprise Section (SEES)
Social and Solidarity Economy Organizations; Public-Private Partnerships; Civil Society Organizations as Entrepreneurs: Including marginalized people
Panel | Thursday, November 21, 2024: 10:00 AM - 11:30 AM | Meeting Room 13
Social Entrepreneurship/Enterprise Section (SEES) Membership and Business Meeting Thursday, November 21 | 4:45 – 5:45 PM | Meeting Room 7
A report of the sections activities and finances will be provided as well as selection for leadership and plans for future activities. Exploring Social Entrepreneurship and Social Enterprises (SEE) Across Asia: An Institutional Perspective Panel | Friday, November 22, 2024: 2:00 PM - 3:30 PM | Meeting Room A
Teaching Section (TEACH)
Teaching Section Colloquium: Using social platforms for collaborative learning Colloquium | Friday, November 22, 2024: 2:00 PM - 3:30 PM | Meeting Room 4
Teaching Section Business Meeting Friday, November 22 | 5:45 – 6:45 PM | Meeting Room 3
Theories, Issues & Boundaries Section (TIBS)
TIBS Colloquium: What is The Grounded Theory Approach?: Principles, Challenges, and Contributions to Nonprofit Research Colloquium | Friday, November 22, 2024: 9:00 AM - 10:30 AM | Rock Creek B
TIBS Colloquium: Is Pluralism Dead? Nonprofits, Democracy, and the Challenge of Inclusive Engagement Colloquium | Friday, November 22, 2024: 4:00 PM - 5:30 PM | Rock Creek A
Theories, Issues & Boundaries Section (TIBS) Membership Meeting
Friday, November 22, 2024: 5:45 PM - 6:30 PM | Rock Creek A
Theories, Issues and Boundaries Section (TIBS) Member Dinner
Friday, November 22, 2024: 6:30 PM - 8:30 PM | Hill Country BBQ, 410 7th St NW, Washington, D.C.
Welcome to Hans Peter Schmitz, our new Mattocks Distinguished Professor in Nonprofit Leadership!
The School of Public and International Affairs is excited to welcome our inaugural Mattocks Distinguished Professor in Nonprofit Leadership, Hans Peter Schmitz. Dr. Schmitz brings an expertise in international NGOs, human rights, philanthropy and transnational advocacy.
North Carolina State University is home to North Carolina’s only Ph.D. program in public administration and a highly ranked MPA program and Graduate Certificate in Nonprofit Management. Our department includes 15 tenure-track faculty members who hold a wide range of expertise in public and nonprofit management, intergovernmental relations, network governance, policy analysis, public policy process, science and technology policy, and sustainable energy policy:
Graham Ambrose
Assistant Professor
Thomas A. Birkland Professor
James R. Brunet Associate Professor
Iseul Choi Assistant Professor
Jerrell D. Coggburn Professor and Chair
Dennis M. Daley Professor
Jeffrey C. Diebold
Associate Professor
Christopher S. Galik Professor
Serena Y. Kim
Assistant Professor
Jennifer Kuzma Professor
Bruce D. McDonald III Professor
Branda Nowell
Professor
Jay Rickabaugh
Assistant Professor
Hans Peter Schmitz
Mattocks Distinguished Professor in Nonprofit Leadership
Amanda J. Stewart
Associate Professor and MPA Director
Wednesday, November 20
2140 Doctoral Fellows Program
8:00 AM to 5:00 PM Meeting Room 10
2142 ARNOVA Board Meeting
10:00 AM to 4:00 PM Meeting Room 2
2146 Bevol: Volunteer Database Launch (By invitation) 12:00 PM to 4:00 PM Meeting Room 10/11
2143 Nonprofit Academic Centers Council Meeting
11:30 AM to 5:00 PM Meeting Room 8/9
2112 Community Engaged Research: Working with Community Members to Enhance Research and its Impact on the Community.
1:00 PM to 6:00 PM Meeting Room 16
Chair:
Amanda Murphy, Washington State University
2170 Diversity Scholars Meet and Greet (By invitation only)
2:00 PM to 3:00 PM Meeting Room 5
2113 Pre-Conference Session: Federal Support for Research on the Nonprofit Sector
2:00 PM to 3:30 PM RedBud
Chair:
Nathan Dietz, University of Maryland Presenters:
Alexzandra Fogle, National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) Andrea Robles, AmeriCorps May Yuan, National Science Foundation
2145 Graduate Diversity Program - 2023 Cohort
3:00 PM to 8:00 PM Meeting Room 7
2144 Graduate Diversity Program - 2024 Cohort
3:00 PM to 8:00 PM Meeting Room 6
2139 Undergraduate Diversity Program - 2023 - 2024 Cohort
3:00 PM to 8:00 PM Hickory
2138 Pre-Conference Networking Event: Capitol Conversations
4:30 PM to 6:00 PM RedBud
Chair:
Luisa Boyarski, Georgetown University
2168 National Center on Nonprofit Enterprise NCNE board (By invite only)
7:30 AM to 9:00 AM Meeting Room 2
2114 Women’s Philanthropy Institute (WPI) Meeting (by Invitation)
7:30 AM to 9:00 AM
Meeting Room 11
2108 Opening Plenary Session: “Nonprofits and Public Policy: Shaping Change at the International, National, and State Levels”
8:30 AM to 9:45 AM
Potomac Ballroom
Discussant:
Julia Carboni, Washington State University
Presenters:
Catherine Herrold, Syracuse University
Eric Mitchell, Alliance to End Hunger
Cinthia Schuman Ottinger, Aspen Institute
1938 Colloquium on Global Muslim Philanthropy and Comparative Challenges
Global Civil Society, Social Movements, and Grassroots Associations
Colloquium
10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Meeting Room 8
Chair: Iman Fathima Sheik Abdullah, IU Indianapolis
Presenters:
Ahmed Muzakkir Syed, IU Indianapolis
Elnaz Kohen, IU Indianapolis
Jonayed Hossain, IU Indianapolis
Sitashma Thapa, IU Indianapolis
1916 Critical Perspectives Section: Transforming Education and Knowledge into Power for a Brighter Nonprofit Future Open Track Panel
10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Meeting Room 7
Participants:
Hood Academics and the Strength of Street Knowledge: Educators and Practitioners from Marginalized Backgrounds, Jack Brandon Philips, California State University East Bay
Perpetuating Westernized Minds: “The Role of Educational Philanthropy in Africa’s Brain Drain”, Leticia (Stacey) Tetteh, University of Nebraska at Omaha
From Boarding Schools to Charter Schools: How Conservatives Employ Education for Cultural Ethnocide, Roseanne Mirabella, Kean University
Theorizing Power in Nonprofit Research, Margaret Post, Clark University
Chair: Jack Brandon Philips, California State University East Bay
Discussant: Jennifer Dodge, State University of New York Albany
2059 Cross-Border and International Philanthropy Philanthropy, Fundraising, and Giving
Individual
10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Meeting Room 14
Participants:
maxwell.syr.edu/paia-dept
Because effective governance reQuires working together to address the challenges we face.
At Maxwell, we know finding solutions to complex problems starts with identifying partners and involving stakeholders.
That’s why we bring a collaborative approach to everything we do. Whether it’s the ongoing dispute resolution initiatives at the Program for the Advancement of Research on Conflict and Collaboration (PARCC), the budgeting and collaborative governance leadership of Joseph A. Strasser Endowed Professor Tina Nabatchi, or the continuing work of Associate Professor Catherine Herrold, who is documenting the importance of grassroots organizations in the cultivation of democratic civil society, Maxwell’s faculty and students value the importance of working together, building partnerships and using proven models to answer the most pressing challenges within nonprofit and public management.
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 21
#GivingTuesday Puerto Rico and its impact on participating organizations, Luz Mairym Lopez-Rodriguez, University of Puerto Rico
Where does U.S. cross-border giving go? An in-depth analysis of recipient regions and causes, Jon Bergdoll, IU Indianapolis; Xiaonan Kou, IU Indianapolis; Hannah Vos, Indiana University Lilly Family School of Philanthropy; Una Osili, IU Indianapolis Philanthropy and Generosity in Latin America and the Caribbean, Joao Paulo Vergueiro, Fundação Escola de Comércio Álvares PenteadoFECAP, FGV, FECAP; Anita Gallagher, GivingTuesday Insights into Philanthrotourism from the Perspective of Travelers’ Psychographic Characteristics, Leili Abdi, IU Indianapolis Chair:
Christopher Einolf, Northern Illinois University
2078 Government-Nonprofit Collaboration, Polarization, and Public Value
Collaboration: In, Between, and Among Sectors
Individual
10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Meeting Room 9
Participants:
Institutional Arrangements in Nonprofit and Governmental Service Provision: Applying the Institutional Analysis and Development Framework, Janet Jock, Auburn University
Polarization’s Impact on Government-Nonprofit Dynamics, Samantha Zuhlke, University of Iowa
City-Nonprofit Organization Collaboration to Provide Affordable Housing for City’s Residents, Ahmed Rafi, University of Texas Dallas Chair:
Peter Raeymaeckers, University of Antwerp
2099 Innovative Approaches for Social Value Creation in Nonprofit Organzations
Open Track
Individual
10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Meeting Room 6
Participants:
Assessing the Impact of the Housing Development Program by the Greater Cleveland Habitat for Humanity, Valencia Prentice, Cleveland State University
Are Nonprofit Labs the Future? Unpacking their Role in Alleviating Administrative Burdens in Nonprofit Organizations, Mac-Jane Crayton, Appalachian State University
Exploring instrumental and expressive dimensions of social value creation in a rural Irish social enterprise, David Coffey, Trinity College Dublin; Sheila Cannon, Trinity College Dublin
Taxonomy of Eating Disorder Treatment and Support Organizations: For-profit, Nonprofit and Self-Help Variation and Dimensions, Angela Bies, University of Maryland
Chair:
Shawn Maxwell, University of Nebraska Omaha
1898 NGOs and Localization: Power, Politics, and the Future of Foreign Aid Conference Theme
Colloquium
10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Meeting Room 16
Presenters:
Jennifer Brinkerhoff, George Washington University
Catherine Herrold, Syracuse University
Mark Sidel, University of Wisconsin Madison
Maryam Zarnegar Deloffre, George Washington University
2089 Organizational, Dynamics, and Innovation
Innovation and Entrepreneurship
Individual
10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Meeting Room 3
Participants:
Exploring Platform Cooperatives: Divergent Perspectives and Practices Among Domestic Worker Cooperatives in S. Korea, Seon Mi Kim, Hunter College; Bok Gyo Jeong, Kean University, Kean University; Hyungsik Um, International Co-operative Alliance
Who Buys Into “Cheap Talk”? Effects of Costly and Costless Signals on Social Enterprises’ Fundraising, Chen Ji, Louisiana State University Shreveport; Fredrik O Andersson, Indiana University Indianapolis
Adopting Flexibility: Understanding Organizational Drivers of Flexible Labor Adoption in Nonprofits, Qiaozhen Liu, Florida Atlantic University; Hala Altamimi, University of Kansas
The Power of the Physical Environment: Design for social impact in Child Advocacy Centers, Anna Ruth Gatlin, Auburn University; Peter Weber, Auburn University
Chair: Wycliffe Nduga Ouma, University of Witwatersrand
1957 Power Dynamics in Nonprofit Governance: Recognition, Resistance, and Redistribution Sponsored by the Governance Section
Governance, Leadership and Management Colloquium
10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Meeting Room 12
Chair: Judy Freiwirth, Nonprofit Solutions Associates
Discussant: Kenneth Taylor, The Bush School at Texas A&M
Presenters:
Patricia Bradshaw, St. Mary’s University; Chao Guo, University of Pennsylvania; Vernetta Walker, Vernetta Walker & Associates; Angela Eikenberry, University of Connecticut; Nesly Metayer, EquiLead
2096 Preparing Tomorrow’s Nonprofit Leaders: Curriculum Re/ design for Equity
Governance, Leadership and Management Colloquium
10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
River Birch A
Chair: Kara Wentworth, La Salle University
Discussant: Tene Traylor, Urban Institute
Presenters:
Dr. Merlene Patrice Quispe, University of Minnesota; Kara Wentworth, La Salle University; Lindsay Kijewski, The Nonprofit Repositioning Fund
2046 Psychological and Social Dynamics of Volunteering Voluntarism and Volunteering
Individual
10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Meeting Room 2
Participants:
The dark side of orphanage support: How the NGO halo effect perpetuates orphanage volunteering, Philine van Overbeeke, The Gradel Institute of Charity, University of Oxford; Isabel de Bruin Cardoso, Erasmus University
Secondary Traumatic Stress and Posttraumatic Growth among NGO’s Volunteers: Role of Personal and Environmental Factors, Dorit Brafman, Ariel University; Anat Ben Porat, Bar Ilan University
Understanding Frustrations in Community Service: Frustration Types and Predictors, Yinglin Ma, University of Central Florida; Mary Tschirhart, The George Washington University Chair: Rebecca Nesbit, University of Georgia
1977 Richly Contextualized Data on Giving and Volunteering: Research Uses of the Philanthropy Panel Study Advances in Data and Methodology Colloquium
10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Meeting Room 10
Chair:
Una Osili, IU Indianapolis
Presenters:
Daniel Hungerman, University of Notre Dame; Mark Ottoni-Wilhelm, Indiana University Indianapolis; Baris Yoruk, State University of New York Albany
1854 Social and Solidarity Economy Organizations; Public-Private Partnerships; Civil Society Organizations as Entrepreneurs: Including marginalized people
Global Civil Society, Social Movements, and Grassroots Associations Panel
10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Meeting Room 13
Participants:
Navigating the Intersection of Race and Social Entrepreneurship: A DEIJ Perspective on Public/Private Partnerships, Joshua Evans, The Learning Source
Civil Society Organizations: A device for social innovation and entrepreneurship to achieve energy justice, David Bell, Indiana University Bloomington
Social and Solidarity Economy Organizations Advancing Social Equity for Vulnerable Populations: Cases of Southeast Asia, Bok Gyo Jeong, Kean University
The Vital Role of Non-Profits and Volunteers in Ensuring U.S. Elections, Lorenda Naylor, University of Baltimore
Chair: David Bell, Indiana University Bloomington
2128 Social Media and Online Discourse Conference Theme
Individual
10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Meeting Room 4
Participants:
Online Aesthetics: Nonprofit Discourse and Identity Online, Zach Curinga, Rutgers University
Enhancing advocacy for small NPOs on Facebook: A Strategy on Multifaceted Messaging and Audience Preferences., Wen chen Denq, California Lutheran University
Social Media Advocacy of Gender Equity-Focused Nonprofit Organizations and Critical Discourses, Seoeun Jung, University of La Verne
Mobilizing in crisis: Examining action-based social media messaging during the 2022 Mpox outbreak, Alicia Papanek, University of Florida; Xiaobei Chen, University of Florida; Seth Meyer, Bridgewater State University; Kimberly Wiley, University of Florida
Chair: Brent Never, University of Missouri Kansas City
2040 Sustainability and Resilience
Nonprofit Finance
Individual
10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Meeting Room 5
Participants:
Financial Sustainability of Qatar’s Third Sector through Direct Public Investment, Moosa Elayah, Doha Insititute for gradate studies, Doha Institute for Graduate Studies
Managing Missions for Perpetuity: Sustainable Financial Performance of Land Trusts in the United States, Ha Vien, North Carolina State University; Yingzhou Yao, North Carolina State University; Eliana Sanchez, North Carolina State University
Operating Reserves and Nonprofit Resilience, Jingyan Cheng, Rutgers University
The Impact of Tax-exempt Bond Issuance on Nonprofits’ Financial Performance, Qingqing Sun, University of Texas at Austin
Chair: Mark Hager, Arizona State University
2009 The Current Status of the International Third Sector: Balancing Market Forces and Grassroots Efforts
Global Civil Society, Social Movements, and Grassroots Associations
Individual 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Meeting Room 15
Participants:
Professionalizing Ourselves out of Grassroots Strengths? A Case Study Approach Looking into INGO/NGO Executive Decision-making, Kara Lawrence, University of North Carolina Wilmington
On the Marketization of International Aid, Daniel Zorrilla, University of Delaware
Following the funds: Analyzing philanthropic flows to gender-based advocacy organizations in Liberia and South Africa, Brittany Branyon, Auburn University
Local civil society adaptations in countries unaccustomed to migrationprospective research from migration from Ukraine, Shawn Flanigan, San Diego State University; Tererai Sithole, University of Agder
Chair: Mohammed Awal Alhassan, Norsaac
1879 Understanding Charitable Giving among Muslims: Findings from a Multi-country Survey on Zakat, Sadaqa, and Waqf
Philanthropy, Fundraising, and Giving
Panel
10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Hickory
Participants:
Survey Findings from Jordan, Abed Ayoub, United Mission for Relief & Development (UMR)
Survey Findings from Kuwait, Samir Abu-Rumman, Princeton University
Survey Findings from Pakistan and the US, Yusri Supiyan, Singapore Management University
Survey Findings from Turkey, Selman Kesgin, Ankara Yıldırım Beyazıt University
Chair: Rafeel Wasif, Portland State University
Discussant: Shariq Siddiqui, IU Indianapolis
THURSDAY,
1936 Using AI to Understand Human and Organizational Behavior
Conference Theme Panel
10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
River Birch B
Participants:
Do Donors Reward SDG Focus?, Dominik Meier, University of Basel; Georg von Schnurbein, Universität Basel; Elizabeth Searing, The University of Texas Dallas
Using OpenAI Text Embeddings to Measure Nonprofit Alignment with AI Governance Mechanisms, Megan LePere-Schloop, The Ohio State University; Aysha Chaudhry, The Ohio State University Philanthropy as Contagion: Modeling Peer Influence using Agents, Donald Searing, Syncere Systems, LLC; Elizabeth Searing, The University of Texas Dallas
Empowering Philanthropy with data-driven insights for partnership optimization, Lucia Gomez Teijeiro, University of Geneva; Nisa Thomas, University of Geneva; Giuseppe Ugazio, University of Geneva
Chair: Megan LePere-Schloop, The Ohio State University
Discussant: Robert Ressler, Institute for Child, Youth and Family Policy
1965 Writing for the Public: How to Get Your Research and Expertise into the Public Square Public Policy, Law, Regulation, and Advocacy Colloquium
10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Meeting Room 11
Chair: Emily Schwartz Greco, The Conversation U.S.
Discussant: Benjamin Soskis, Urban Institute
Presenters:
Emily Schwartz Greco, The Conversation U.S.; Benjamin Soskis, Urban Institute; Amy Saltzman, Chronicle of Philanthropy; Glenn Gamboa, The Associated Press
2157 Networking Break
11:45 AM to 1:00 PM
2109 Membership Meeting
1:00 PM to 1:45 PM Potomac Ballroom
1943 Analyzing Different Layers of Volunteer Infrastructure in Crisis and Beyond
Voluntarism and Volunteering Panel
2:00 PM to 3:00 PM
Meeting Room 2
Participants:
Cross-sector volunteering infrastructure in times of crises, Michal AlmogBar, Hebrew University Jerusalem; Ronit Bar, Hebrew University Jerusalem
Volunteer infrastructures as public private partnership: connecting the dots, Georg von Schnurbein, Universität Basel
The role of volunteer centers: Creating a healthy volunteer resources ecosystem, Lucas Meijs, Rotterdam School of Management, Erasmus University; Philine van Overbeeke, The Gradel Institute of Charity, University of Oxford; Stephanie Koolen-Maas, Centre for Philanthropic Studies, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Chair: Georg von Schnurbein, Universität Basel
Discussant: Lucas Meijs, Rotterdam School of Management, Erasmus University
1909 Building a Comprehensive Global Data Archive on Civil Society and Related Disciplines
Advances in Data and Methodology
Colloquium
2:00 PM to 3:00 PM
Meeting Room 14
Chair: Naoto Yamauchi, Japan Association of Social Relations
Discussant: Akinobu Ogawa, Niigata University
Presenters:
Stefan Toepler, George Mason University; Helen Liu, National Taiwan University; Takayuki Yoshioka, Okayama University
2086 Civil Society, Environmental and Contemporary Issues in Asia Global Civil Society, Social Movements, and Grassroots Associations
Individual
2:00 PM to 3:00 PM
Meeting Room 15
Participants:
A Conjoint Experiment on Public Support for Environmental NGOs in Southeast Asia, Christianna Parr, University of Washington
Equitable Ocean Funding: Enhancing Global Ocean Resilience, Ash Enrici, IU Indianapolis
Evolution of Civic Coalition in Crises: From 2014 Sewol Ferry Crisis to 2022 Itaewon Crisis, Jungwon Yeo, University of Central Florida; Eunsil Yoo, University of Central Florida
Chair: Honey Minkowitz, University of Nebraska Omaha
2094 Co-creating Practices and Realizing Rights:Mmulti-actor Perspectives
Performance Measurement and Evaluation
Individual
2:00 PM to 3:00 PM
Hickory
Participants:
Nonprofit Help with Administrative Burden: The Effect of “Know Your Rights” Initiatives on Citizen Stress, Shaun Khurana, Indiana University Bloomington, Indiana University - Bloomington Are nonprofits located in the communities that need them?, Robert Ressler, Institute for Child, Youth and Family Policy; Yang Lu, Brandeis University
Echoing the ‘Voices Unheard’: Exploring Young People’s Perceptions of Employment Services in the Voluntary Sector, Oluwaferanmi Adeyemo, Sheffield Hallam University
Chair: Lucia Gomez Teijeiro, University of Geneva
1966 Dark(er) Sides of Nonprofit Organizations and Community Work: Critical Lenses for Scholars, Policy-Makers, and Practitioners
Innovation and Entrepreneurship Panel
2:00 PM to 3:00 PM
Meeting Room 3
Participants:
Community Development Gone Dark Side: A Critical Approach to Understanding Mistakes, Failures, and Tragedies, Craig Talmage, Hobart & William Smith Colleges; Brien Ashdown, Albizu University; Bryan Hains, University of Kentucky; Kristina Hains, University of Kentucky; Matthew Mars, The University of Arizona; Rhonda Phillips, Chatham University
Darkness and Lightness: Advances in Moral and Ethical Theory Approaches to Social Entrepreneurship, Gordon Shockley,
Arizona State University; Kelly Rutt, Environmental Information Association; Craig Talmage, Hobart & William Smith Colleges; Peter Frank, Grove City College
Dark Sides of Developmental Aid, Philanthropy, and Voluntourism, Brien Ashdown, Albizu University; Craig Talmage, Hobart & William Smith Colleges; Patsy Kraeger, Chatham University
Chair: Craig Talmage, Hobart & William Smith Colleges
Discussant: Patsy Kraeger, Chatham University
2003 Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in Nonprofit Organizations: From Concepts to Empirical Evidence
Leading and Managing Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in Organizations
Individual
2:00 PM to 3:00 PM
Meeting Room 8
Participants:
Organizational and Individual Determinants of Workplace Inclusion, Nara Yoon, James Madison University; Minjung Kim, Syracuse University; Mark Hager, Arizona State University
Thinking along the same line? A review of workplace diversity and representation in nonprofit studies, Bo Li, State University of New York Albany; Hongseok Lee, State University of New York Albany
Are Diverse Nonprofit Organizations More Favored by Donors? A Survey Experiment, Jung Ho Choi, University of Pennsylvania; ChiaKo Hung, University of Pennsylvania; Femida Handy, University of Pennsylvania
Chair: Malika Ouacha, Erasmus University
1949 Editor’s Panel: Exploring Academic Journals Focused on Nonprofit, Philanthropy, and Voluntary Action Research
Professional Development Workshop
2:00 PM to 3:00 PM
River Birch A
Chairs:
Lewis Faulk, American University
Susan Appe, State University of New York Albany
Richard Clerkin, University of North Carolina Wilmington
Presenters:
Roseanne Mirabella, Kean University
Fredrik O Andersson, Indiana University Indianapolis
Christopher Prentice, University of North Carolina Wilmington
Mirae Kim, George Mason University
Joanne Carman, University of North Carolina Charlotte
2054 Emergent Research on the African Nonprofit Sector and the Solidarity Economy Movement
Nonprofits, Philanthropy, and Voluntary Action in the Humanities
Individual
2:00 PM to 3:00 PM
Meeting Room 7
Participants:
Conceptualizing Dignified and Fulfilling Work in the Nonprofit Sector in Africa: Youth Perspective, Dennis Boahene Osei, University of Witwatersrand; Bhekinkosi Moyo, University of Witwatersrand; Wycliffe Nduga Ouma, University of Witwatersrand; Eleanor Meda Chipeta, University of Witwatersrand
The Contribution of Nonprofit Sector to African Economies: A Synthesis Literature Review, Eleanor Meda Chipeta, University of Witwatersrand; Wycliffe Nduga Ouma, University of Witwatersrand; Dennis Boahene Osei, University of Witwatersrand; Bhekinkosi Moyo, University of Witwatersrand
Black Philanthropy & Giving: Fostering Spaces of Black Fugitivity & Community Wealth Cooperative Ecosystems, Kenya Love, University of Nebraska Omaha
Chair: Roland Kushner, Muhlenberg College
2063 Experimental Research on Giving and Donor Motivations
Philanthropy, Fundraising, and Giving
Individual
2:00 PM to 3:00 PM
Meeting Room 10
Participants:
Signal of Financial or Performance Transparency? The Impact and Mechanisms of Nonprofit Transparency on Donations, Yiming Dai, Zhejiang University
A Panel Analysis of the Financial Impact of Nonprofit Marketing Spending, Prince Oricha, Auburn University
Institutional Norms and Philanthropy: An Experimental Exploration of Nonprofit Professionalization, Brent Never, University of Missouri Kansas City; Robert Christensen, Brigham Young University
Chair: Laura Schlachter, AmeriCorps
2075 Grantmaking, Foundations, and Collaboration
Collaboration: In, Between, and Among Sectors
Individual
2:00 PM to 3:00 PM
Meeting Room 13
Participants:
The Power of Nonprofit—An Empirical Analysis of Collaborative Relationships between nonprofits and Foundations in China, Wenpei You, IU Indianapolis
Reforming State Grantmaking to Nonprofit Organizations: A UserCentered Design on Request for Proposals, Chengxin Xu, Seattle University; Yuan Cheng, University of Minnesota; Weston Merrick, Minnesota Management and Budget; Patrick Carter, Results for America; Kari Aanestad, Minnesota Council of Nonprofits; Anastasia Polda, Minnesota Management & Budget
The Ecosystem of Faith-based Grantmaking: Mapping Grantmakers to Grantees, Allison Ralph, Cohesion Strategy; Brad Fulton, Indiana University
Chair: Abdul Samad, Indiana University
2069 Leadership Theories and Approaches
Governance, Leadership and Management
Individual
2:00 PM to 3:00 PM
River Birch B
Participants:
Humanizing Board Governance through Participatory Leadership: Strategies for Effective Transformation, Shahrin Upoma, University of Minnesota
How Do Community Service Providers Seeing Themselves as a Leader Differ from Those Who Don’t?, Mary Tschirhart, The George Washington University; Yinglin Ma, University of Central Florida
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 21
Nonprofit Management Education in the African Continent: The Case of Liberia, Kelly Ann Krawczyk, Auburn University; Peter Weber, Auburn University; Bhekinkosi Moyo, University of Witwatersrand; Jacob Mati, University of Witwatersrand
Chair: Anthoanette Kommeh, Kennesaw State University
1910 Mismeasuring Nonprofit Impact: What Goes Wrong and How to do it Better Performance Measurement and Evaluation Panel
2:00 PM to 3:00 PM Meeting Room 4
Participants:
Mismeasuring Impact: How Randomized Controlled Trials Threaten the Nonprofit Sector, Nicole Marwell, University of Chicago; Jennifer Mosley, University of Chicago
Hidden Impact: Taking Relationships Seriously When Evaluating Nonprofit Social Change, Lehn Benjamin, IU Indianapolis
Hidden Heroes, Dave Campbell, University of California Davis
Chair: Mary Kay Gugerty, University of Washington
Discussant: Mary Kay Gugerty, University of Washington
2061 New Contexts for Nonprofit Fundraising Philanthropy, Fundraising, and Giving
Individual
2:00 PM to 3:00 PM Meeting Room 16
Participants:
Examining the Implications of Donor Advised Funds for Fundraising Paradigms, Genevieve Shaker, IU Indianapolis; Alyssa Minor, Brigham Young University; Rachel Sumsion, Brigham Young University; Enoch Paxton, Brigham Young University; Dan Heist, Brigham Young University
Nonprofit Organizational Adaptations Following Philanthropic Windfalls, Ryne Crout Jones, North Carolina State University
The Adoption and Effectiveness of Community-Centered Fundraising, Elizabeth Dale, Grand Valley State University; Maya Hemachandra, Sambar Nonprofit Solutions
Chair: Andy Vance, The Ohio State University
2017 Nonprofit Workforce Challenges and Opportunities: Mission Motivation, Burnout, and Well-Being Governance, Leadership and Management
Individual
2:00 PM to 3:00 PM
Meeting Room 12
Participants:
The Relationship Between Burnout, Mission Attachment, and Values Congruence in Nonprofit Fundraisers, Samantha Plotner, University of Illinois Chicago
Assessing the Toll on Health and Human Service Staff: Does Meaningfulness at Work Foster Well-Being?, Kandyce Fernandez Sawyer, Johns Hopkins University; Dr. Robbie Robichau, Texas A&M University; Joannie Tremblay-Boire, University of Maryland; Jennifer Alexander, University of Texas San Antonio
Opportunities to Strengthen Vulnerable Workforces: Lessons across the Nonprofit and Child Care Industries, Zeta Green, University of Washington; Rachel Fyall, University of Washington
Chair: Jeff Williams, Dorothy A. Johnson Center for Philanthropy, Grand Valley State University
2007 Nonprofit-Government Collaboration: Process, Mediators, and Consequences
Collaboration: In, Between, and Among Sectors
Individual
2:00 PM to 3:00 PM
Meeting Room 9
Participants: What do we mean by collaboration processes? A systematic review of the literature, Danbi Seo, Arizona State University; Beth Gazley, Indiana University Bloomington; Chao Guo, University of Pennsylvania
Creating Public Value with Philanthropic Funding? the case of police foundations, Jeongyoon Yang, Georgia Institute of Technology, Georgia State University; Jung Won Choi, Georgia State University, Georgia Institute of Technology; Jason Coupet, Georgia State University
Chair: Megan Pontes, Arizona State University
1923 NPFFM Section Panel: Resiliency Following Hardship
Nonprofit Finance Panel
2:00 PM to 3:00 PM
Meeting Room 5
Participants: Who Pays for Nonprofit Cyber-Crime?, James Norcross, Dallas College, University of Texas at Dallas; Elizabeth Searing, The University of Texas Dallas
Determinants of Resilience in Spanish Non-Governmental Development Organizations, Inigo Garcia-Rodriguez, University of Burgos; Tania Cuesta-Elvira, University of Burgos; M. Elena Romero-Merino, University of Burgos
Debt Averse or Risk Averse? The Case of U.S. Federally Qualified Health Centers, Marcus Lam, University of San Diego; Nathan Grasse, Carleton University; Michael Ford, University of Winsconsin Oshkosh
Chair: Elizabeth Searing, The University of Texas Dallas
Discussant: Elizabeth Searing, The University of Texas Dallas
1972 Science for the People: How to Make your Research a Public Hit
Professional Development Workshop
2:00 PM to 3:00 PM
Meeting Room 11
Chair: Samir Khan, GivingTuesday
Presenters: Samir Khan, GivingTuesday; Victoria Leonhardt, GivingTuesday; Joao Paulo Vergueiro, FGV
1989 State and Local Faith-based Initiatives: Lessons for the Nonprofit Sector
Open Track Panel
2:00 PM to 3:00 PM
Meeting Room 6
Participants: Tennessee and Texas’ Faith-based Initiatives: Lessons for the Nonprofit Sector, Stephanie Boddie, Baylor University
Fairfax County ‘s Faith-based Initiatives: Lessons for the Nonprofit sector, Rebecca Padot, University of Pennsylvania
Montgomery County’s Faith-based Initiatives: Lessons for the Nonprofit Sector, Ivy Richie, Baylor University
Chair: Stephanie Boddie, Baylor University
Discussant: Ben O’Dell, Department of Health & Human Services
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 21
2051 Authoritarianism and Religious Regulation
Public Policy, Law, Regulation, and Advocacy
Individual
3:30 PM to 4:30 PM
Meeting Room 11
Participants:
Too Big to Discriminate or Regulate? The Religious Exemption Effect on State Foster Care Performances, Courtney Hahm, Indiana University Bloomington
De-registration of Civil Society Organisations under Authoritarianism: A Mixed-Method Study, Lin Xu, The University of Hong Kong; Hui Li, The University of Hong Kong
Authoritarianism in US State Politics and the Impact on Nonprofit Civil Liberties, Jennifer Alexander, University of Texas San Antonio; Beth Gazley, Indiana University Bloomington
Chair: Luisa Boyarski, Georgetown University
1969 Critical Perspectives Section PDW: Navigating Higher Education in Turbulent Times
Professional Development Workshop
3:30 PM to 4:30 PM
Meeting Room 10
Chairs: Roseanne Mirabella, Kean University; Kimberly Wiley, University of Florida
Presenter:
Shuyi Deng, Indiana University
2026 Donative DEI: Racial/Ethnic Identity and Intersectionality in Philanthropy
Philanthropy, Fundraising, and Giving
Individual
3:30 PM to 4:30 PM
Meeting Room 14
Participants:
Equity in funding practice: How are funders responding to the challenges of social justice?, Daniel King, Nottingham Trent University
Revisiting the Predictors of Charitable Giving: Examining U.S. Donor Characteristics by Racial Identity, Samantha Zuhlke, University of Iowa; Apolonia Calderon, University of Maryland College Park
More Than the Sum of My Parts: Giving Motivations Through an Intersectional Lens, Lauren Dula, Binghamton University; Ruth Hansen, University of Wisconsin, Whitewater
Chair: Pamala Wiepking, IU Indianapolis
2002 Financial Stability and Growth in Small and Mid-sized
Nonprofits
Nonprofit Finance
Individual
3:30 PM to 4:30 PM
Meeting Room 9
Participants:
Sustainable Earned Revenue Strategies for Small/Mid-Sized Cultural Organizations: A Field Scan and Pilot Program, Neville Vakharia, Drexel University
Grow low or climb high: Financial challenges and strategic outlook of mid-sized nonprofits, Georg von Schnurbein, Universität Basel
Should New Social Ventures Attain Stability by Growing?, Fredrik O Andersson, IU Indianapolis; Chen Ji, Louisiana State University Shreveport
Chair: Barnabas Suva, James Madison University
2032 Governance Networks and Ground Up Responses to Homelessness
Governance, Leadership and Management
Individual
3:30 PM to 4:30 PM
Meeting Room 12
Participants:
Collaborative governance tested being robust in the time of adversity, Hee Soun Jang, University of North Texas; Sara Ford, University of North Texas; Jihoon Jeong, Texas A&M International University
A Conceptual Framework for Centering the Creative Ingenuity of the Unhoused in Responses to Homelessness, Ryan Savino, The Graduate Center at the City University of New York; James Mandiberg, Silberman School of Social Work at Hunter College, CUNY Graduate Center
The effect of merging mandated collaborative governance networks on community-based outcomes: Competition or collaboration, Andrew Sullivan, University of Central Florida; Saerim Kim, Suffolk University; Hanvit Kim, University of Central Florida
Chair: Hala Altamimi, University of Kansas
1871 How Our Changing World Is Changing Nonprofit Law and Practice
Public Policy, Law, Regulation, and Advocacy Panel
3:30 PM to 4:30 PM
Meeting Room 3
Participants:
Charity Law and Blockchain Technology, Lloyd Hitoshi Mayer, Notre Dame University
Removing Public and Visual Art: Intersections of Nonprofit Law, Art Law, and Contract, Mark Sidel, University of Wisconsin Madison; Dave Bright, University of Iowa
Regulation of Foundation Investing for Impact: The Swiss and US Perspectives, Dana Brakman Reiser, Brooklyn Law School; Giulia Neri-Castracane, University of Geneva, Faculty of Law
Chair: Dana Brakman Reiser, Brooklyn Law School
2027 Human Resources Management
Open Track
Individual
3:30 PM to 4:30 PM
Meeting Room 6
Participants:
How does diversity management and inclusive leadership practices affect perceived organizational justice among nonprofit employees?, Sabah Panhwar, University of Utah; Jesus N Valero, University of Utah, Department of Political Science, University of Utah
Diversifying Employee Development and Training: The Effect of Civic Engagement on Self-Efficacy, Julie Beasley, Indiana University
Leader’s Communication Behavior using NLP, new opportunities to advance our understanding of leadership, Zerrouk Bessa, James Madison University
Chair: Megan Pontes, Arizona State University
2092 Impact Evaluation as a Collaborative Practice: Taking Stock of Context and Capacity
Performance Measurement and Evaluation
Individual
3:30 PM to 4:30 PM
THURSDAY,
Meeting Room 13
Participants:
Co-determination in Action: Navigating Challenges of Developing Performance Measurement Instruments in Collaboration with Social Workers, Elien Mathys, University of Antwerp; Peter Raeymaeckers, University of Antwerp
Balancing the person-centered approach with outcome evaluation in multilateral collaborative settings, Takayuki Yoshioka, Okayama University
Chair: Yinglin Ma, University of Central Florida
2015 Innovating Inclusion: Pathways to Enhanced Organizational DEAI Across Sectors
Leading and Managing Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in Organizations
Individual
3:30 PM to 4:30 PM
Meeting Room 8
Participants:
Mitigating Racial Bias Through Music: Opera, Race, and American Political Behavior, Noemi Oeding, Samford University
Exploring Effective DEAI Initiatives Towards Racial Diversity and Equity in U.S. Symphony Orchestras, Qiaochu Wang, Florida State University
Queering Sportsball: Making sports nonprofits more friendly for the LGBTQIA+ community., Seth Meyer, Bridgewater State University; Michelle Evans, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga; Jose Irizarry, North Carolina Central University
Chair: Ruth Bernstein, Pepperdine University
1978 Innovations in the Practice, Theory, and Methods of Nonprofit Finance
Nonprofit Finance
Panel
3:30 PM to 4:30 PM
Meeting Room 5
Participants:
Examining Financial Capacities and Fiscal Sponsorship Models, Deborah Carroll, University of Illinois Chicago; Kate Albrecht, University of Illinois Chicago
Charity Revenue Portfolio Optimization: Incorporating Asymmetric Risk and Dependence, Nathan Grasse, Carleton University; Elizabeth Searing, The University of Texas Dallas
Synthetic Control for Nonprofit Finance, Jason Coupet, Georgia State University
Chair: Deborah Carroll, University of Illinois Chicago
2055 International Civil Society and Civic Engagement
Nonprofits, Philanthropy, and Voluntary Action in the Humanities
Individual
3:30 PM to 4:30 PM
Meeting Room 7
Participants:
The Long-Run Impacts of Conversionary Religious Development Missions: A Meta Analysis, Jonathan Oxley, Georgia State University
Is the public really clueless?: Testing public knowledge about nonprofits, Joannie Tremblay-Boire, University of Maryland
The present through the future: On temporality and tomorrow’s importance for today’s nonprofit organizations, Johan Hvenmark, Marie Cederischold University; Ola Segnestam Larsson, Marie Cederschiold University
An Organization-As-A-Movement: An Innovative Model to Solve Social Problems at Scale?, Jason Spicer, City University of New York; Tamara Kay, Keough School, Notre Dame
Chair: Shiqi Peng, The University of Hong Kong
2093 Measuring Social Impact across Sectors and Organizational Boundaries
Performance Measurement and Evaluation
Individual
3:30 PM to 4:30 PM
Meeting Room 15
Participants:
Does aid intensity increase the performance of international development (ID) programs?, Nabila Parijat, University of Texas Dallas
Nonprofit Economic Impact Calculator, Chen Ji, Louisiana State University Shreveport; Heather Carpenter, Louisiana State University Shreveport, Institute for Nonprofit Administration and Research LSUS
Social Impact Across Sectors: A Comparative Study of Impact Measurement and Management Practices, Kailin Liu, Tunghai University
Chair: Yinman Zhong, North Carolina State University
2016 Nonprofit Evaluation Cultures: Connecting Funder and Grantee Perspectives
Performance Measurement and Evaluation
Individual
3:30 PM to 4:30 PM
Meeting Room 4
Participants:
Investigating Inequities in US Program Evaluation: Historical Context and Future Directions, Vivien Ahrens, University of Wisconsin Madison
Exploring Program Evaluation Practices Across United States Community Foundations, Sara Wozniak, Binghamton University
Translating Performance Between Funders and Nonprofits, David Berlan, Florida State University; Gary VanLandingham, Florida State University; Sina Jangjoo, Florida State University
Chair: Jessica Berrett, University of Colorado Colorado Springs
2068 Nonprofit Governance Governance, Leadership and Management
Individual 3:30 PM to 4:30 PM River Birch B
Participants: Nonprofit Governance as Space for Engaging Business-persons: From the Case of Quasi-Board Program, Aya Okada, Tohoku University; Yu Ishida, Kwansei Gakuin University; Mio Yamamoto, World in You; Yuko Mishiro, World in You
Parrhesia as a strategy for nonprofit governance, Juri Hoedemakers, Erasmus University; Isabel de Bruin Cardoso, Rotterdam School of Management Erasmus University; Lucas Meijs, Rotterdam School of Management, Erasmus University
Chair: Ramya Ramanath, DePaul University
2071 Organizational Crisis and Survival Governance, Leadership and Management
Individual
3:30 PM to 4:30 PM
River Birch A
Participants:
How crisis changes leadership: A post-pandemic review of leadership change., Cynthia W. Rojas, PhD, Rojas Blakely & Associates
Explaining the Survival of Environmental NGOs in China: Organizational Ecology, Institutional Legitimacy, and Resource Dependency, Hui Li, The University of Hong Kong; Shui Yan Tang, University of Southern California; Carlos Wing-Hung Lo, Chinese University of Hong Kong
Navigating Turbulence: Insights into Adaptive Governance from the Pandemic Responses in South Korea, Hee Soun Jang, University of North Texas; Hyojun Kim, University of North Texas; Jintak Kim, University of North Texas
Chair: Jessica Word, University of Nevada Las Vegas
2034 Revisiting Nonprofit Revenue Crowding-out Dynamics Nonprofit Finance
Individual
3:30 PM to 4:30 PM Hickory
Participants:
Why Does Cash Crowd Out Donations? The Role of Efficiency And Fundraising Efforts, Teresa Elvira-Lorilla, University of Burgos; Inigo Garcia-Rodriguez, University of Burgos; M. Elena RomeroMerino, University of Burgos; Marcos Santamaria-Mariscal, University of Burgos
Nonprofit Revenue Crowding Revisited: Exploring Revenue Dynamics of Government Funding and Gift-in-kind, Tianyi Li, University of Texas Dallas
Government, Gun, Giving: A Study of Intrinsic Crowding Out, Huafang Li, University of Pittsburgh
Chair: Ellie Heng Qu, Texas A&M University
2000 Volunteering, Race/Ethnicity, and Community Context Voluntarism and Volunteering
Individual
3:30 PM to 4:30 PM Meeting Room 2
Participants:
Latino Formal and Informal Volunteering and Well-being - The case of South Carolina, Stefanie Ruiz, Clemson University; Leah Dodge, Clemson University
Racial Differences in the Effect of Community Civic Infrastructure on Volunteering, Rebecca Nesbit, University of Georgia; Laurie Paarlberg, Indiana University
Chair: Selman Kesgin, Turk Kizilay
2118 ARNOVA Governance Section Annual Meeting
4:45 PM to 5:45 PM Meeting Room 16
2153 ARNOVA NP3 Common Interest Group Meeting
4:45 PM to 5:45 PM Meeting Room 8
2115 Community and Grassroots Associations Section Business Meeting
4:45 PM to 5:45 PM Meeting Room 12
2117 Critical Perspectives Section Membership Meeting
4:45 PM to 5:45 PM Meeting Room 11
2125 Donor Advised Funds Common Interest Group Meeting 4:45 PM to 5:45 PM Meeting Room 13
2121 KNPRN Business Meeting
4:45 PM to 5:45 PM Meeting Room 15
2119 Nonprofit Finance and Financial Management Membership Meeting
4:45 PM to 5:45 PM Meeting Room 9
2164 Social Entrepreneurship/Enterprise Section (SEES) Membership and Business Meeting
4:45 PM to 5:45 PM Meeting Room 7
2167 Diasporic and Bi-cultural Cross-border Philanthropy CIG Meeting 5:00 PM to 7:00 PM Meeting Room 6
2147 ARNOVA Global Connections Reception 6:00 PM to 7:00 PM Potomac Ballroom
2169 Governance Section Sponsored Networking Dinner 7:00 PM to 9:00 PM City Tap Kitchen & Craft
2158 Muslim Philanthropy and Civil Society Common Interest Group Dinner 7:00 PM to 9:30 PM Busboys and Poets Restaurant
2116 Community and Grassroots Associations Section Dinner 7:30 PM to 10:00 PM REREN (Chinatown) Restaurant
Friday, November 22
2095 Poster Session 8:00 AM to 9:00 AM Potomac Ballroom
Participants:
The invisible majority: what we know about very small nonprofits (990-N filers), Grace Sato, Candid; Mantin Diomande, Candid; Cathleen Clerkin, Candid
Equity practices in Canadian charitable and nonprofit organizations: Real or a Mirage?, Imoleayo Adeyeri, IU Indianapolis
Trends in the Number of Volunteers and Factors Contributing to the Participation in 2011 disasters, Akiko Iizuka, Utsunomiya University
The Association Between Federally Qualified Healthcare Centers’ Utilization of Telemedicine and Immunization and Screening Rates, Abdulrahman Alsulami, University of San Diego; Marcus Lam, University of San Diego, School of Leadership and Education Sciences
The Voices Of The Future: How Youth Can Inform Decision-Making, Raine McAngus, Arizona State University; Anne Kotleba, Arizona State University; Christina Coleman, Arizona State University
Impact of Fundraising Techniques on Donor Relationships and Nonprofit Sustainability: A Qualitative Analysis, Tahmina Afroz, Upwardly Global
Assessing Undergraduate Nonprofit Management Education Programs: Combining Industry and Student Perspectives, Benjamin Walworth, University of Arkansas
Exploring the Influence of Black American Collectivism on Justice Work at Urban Community Centers, Falen Pope, IU Indianapolis
The Role of Collective Board Members’ Social Capital on the Financial Performance of Non-Profit Organization, Barnabas Suva, James Madison University
Developing a Technology Inventory for (and With) MSW Students: A Tool For Participatory Exploration, Jamie Borgan, City University of New York; Ian Williams, CUNY Graduate Center
Exploring Philanthropy-Based College Assignments: An Experimental Study on Community Engagement Impact, Mac-Jane Crayton, Appalachian State University; Molly Di Rienzo, Appalachian State University; Sydney Iannelli, Appalachian State University
The Effect of Social Media Capital on Nonprofit Organizational Performance, Gregory Saxton, York University; Daniel Neely, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee; Chao Guo, University of Pennsylvania; Michelle Benson, University at Buffalo, SUNY; Tahmina Ahmed, Niagara University
Refugeetude and Philanthropy: A Case of Securitization, Iman Fathima Sheik Abdullah, IU Indianapolis
Why I Got Involved: Case Study on Civil Activities in Post-Disaster Areas, Zhou Yuqin, Tohoku University
What Makes a Difference: Factors Influencing Nonprofit Hospitals’ Provisions of Community Benefits, Yinman Zhong, North Carolina State University
Explore the Comprehensive Accountability of Community Colleges to the Perceived Effectiveness of Student Goal Attainment, Yu Wang, James Madison University
Effect of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act Policies on Employee Satisfaction, Zerrouk Bessa, James Madison University
Representation and Arts Participation: Examining the Role of Diverse Leaders & Relatable Object Labels, Alexandra Olivares, The Mint Museum; Jaclyn Piatak, University of North Carolina Charlotte
The Amish in the era of digital government and the roles of Nonprofit Organizations, Chanyoung Han, The University of Texas Dallas
Unlocking AI Potential: Insights from Non-Profit AI Literacy Programs and Policy Frameworks in the U.S., Nathaniel Nyarko-Debrah, Wayne State University; Sajjad Ahamed, Wayne State University
Cada Guaraguao Tiene Su Pitirre: A Case Study of Taller Puertorriqueño’s Perseverance, Julie Goodman, Drexel University; Esteban ReinaSoto, Drexel University
The Charity Insights Canada Project: A Rapid-Respond Survey Methodology, Paloma Raggo, Carleton University; Callie Mathieson, Carleton University
1919 Advancing Social Enterprise Policy: Emerging Perspectives Innovation and Entrepreneurship Colloquium
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
Meeting Room 3
Chair: Alan Abramson, George Mason University
Presenters: Daniel Barker, Halcyon;
Sonali Chowdhary, George Mason University; Michael Curtin, DC Central Kitchen; Alicia Plerhoples, Georgetown University; Dana Brakman Reiser, Brooklyn Law School; Russell Sullivan, Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck
1952 An Emerging Form of Philanthropy: Exploring How Transformational Gifts are Transforming Nonprofits and Philanthropy
Philanthropy, Fundraising, and Giving Colloquium
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
Meeting Room 14
Presenters:
Hans Peter Schmitz, North Carolina State University, North Carolina State University; Ryne Crout Jones, University of North Carolina Wilmington, North Carolina State University; Brad Fulton, Indiana University; Benjamin Soskis, Urban Institute; John Brothers, T. Rowe Price Foundation
1964 Artificial Intelligence and Philanthropy: the Role of Philanthropy in Promoting Responsible AI Development and Use Conference Theme Colloquium
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
Rock Creek C
Chair: Donald Searing, Syncere Systems, LLC
Presenters:
Giuseppe Ugazio, University of Geneva
Camilla della Giovampaola, University of Geneva; Sherry Huang, Hewlett Foundation
2077 Building and Testing Sector Theories
Collaboration: In, Between, and Among Sectors
Individual
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
Meeting Room 10
Participants:
Foundations of the Sectoral Advantage Framework, Richard Steinberg, IU Indianapolis; Eleanor Brown, Pomona College; Liza Taylor, Independent researcher; Teresa Harrison, Drexel University
What Determines Cross-Sectoral Market Structure?, Teresa Harrison, Drexel University; Richard Steinberg, IU Indianapolis
Family Failure Theory: Gendered Division of Sector Labor by Wealth and Wellbeing, Eva Witesman, Brigham Young University; Ben Gibbs, Brigham Young University; Curtis Child, Brigham Young University
Chair: Ash Enrici, IU Indianapolis
2074 Collaboration, Disaster Response and Resilience
Collaboration: In, Between, and Among Sectors
Individual
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
Meeting Room 9
Participants:
Grow Back Better: The Role of Philanthropy in Shaping Oregon’s Wildfire Response, Joe Wheeler, University of Oregon; Dyana Mason, University of Oregon
Partnership Dynamics in Disaster Relief: Analyzing FEMA and Nonprofit Collaboration for Equitable Resource Allocation, Chris Bellingham, University of Central Florida
Leading for Resiliency: The Case of Homeless Service Networks During the Covid-19 Pandemic, Jesus N Valero, University of Utah; Hee Soun Jang, University of North Texas Chair: Rachel Fyall, University of Washington
1976 Critical Perspectives on Nonprofit Management and Leadership Governance, Leadership and Management Panel
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
Meeting Room 8
Participants:
Exploring the Relationship Between Neoliberal Marketization and Nonprofit Employee Burnout: A Mixed-Methods Case Study Approach, Carl Christiansen, Portland State University; Billie Sandberg, Portland State University; Dr. Robbie Robichau, Texas A & M University
Knowledge as Power: Exploring Resistance to Whiteness in Nonprofit Evaluation, Claire Hoff, University of Nebraska Omaha
Navigating Organizational Trauma during Politically-driven Crises, Kimberly Wiley, University of Florida; Elizabeth Searing, The University of Texas Dallas; Sarah Young, Kennesaw State University Using Foucault to Understand Managerialism as a Tool of White Supremacy, Lauren Willner, San Diego State University Chair: Kimberly Wiley, University of Florida
Discussant: Erynn Beaton, The Ohio State University
1939 Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Justice in Nonprofit Organizations
Leading and Managing Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in Organizations Panel
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
River Birch A
Participants:
Exploring Race and Racialization in Nonprofit Organizations: A Systematic Literature Review, Gregory Wilson, The Ohio State University; Maham Ali, The Ohio State University
Community Foundations’ Shift toward Justice Philanthropy, Marlene Walk, Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg; Megan LePereSchloop, The Ohio State University; Jamie Levine Daniel, New York University; Maham Ali, The Ohio State University
From Charitable Bank to Social Change Advocates: Measuring Institutional Logics of the Community Foundation Field, Christina Dressel, The Ohio State University; Megan LePere-Schloop, The Ohio State University
Decomposing Differences in Nonprofit Financial Outcomes across Racial Lines, Yue Ming, IU Indianapolis; Ellie Heng Qu, Texas A&M University; Laurie Paarlberg, Indiana University
Chair: Megan LePere-Schloop, The Ohio State University
Discussant: Thema Monroe-White, George Mason University
1907 Exclusion as a Means to Inclusion: Public Policy Implications for the Paradox of Nonprofit Discrimination Conference Theme Colloquium
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
Meeting Room 15
Discussant: Lucas Meijs, Rotterdam School of Management, Erasmus University
Presenters:
Isabel de Bruin Cardoso, Erasmus University;
Stefanie Ruiz, Clemson University; Allison Russell, University of Texas Dallas
2008 Hot Topics in Philanthropy
Philanthropy, Fundraising, and Giving Individual
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
Meeting Room 4
Participants:
Meta-analyses reveal more evidence for empathic altruism than for effective altruism, Cassandra Chapman, The University of Queensland; Matthew Hornsey, The University of Queensland; Jessica Spence, The University of Queensland
Understanding the Motivations Behind Cryptocurrency Donations, Aakash Thottam, The University of Queensland; Cassandra Chapman, The University of Queensland; Peter Popkowski Leszczyc, The University of Queensland
Creating a theory of global generosity, Pamala Wiepking, IU Indianapolis, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Is Artificial Intelligence a Disruptive Technology for Nonprofit Organizations?, Abhishek Bhati, Bowling Green State University; Rafeel Wasif, Portland State University
Chair: David Berlan, Florida State University
1958 How America Gives: Unveiling The Secrets of Generosity in GivingPulse
Philanthropy, Fundraising, and Giving Colloquium
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
Meeting Room 5
Chair: Samir Khan, GivingTuesday
Discussants: Marc Maxmeister, GivingTuesday; Samir Khan, GivingTuesday
Presenters:
Marc Maxmeister, GivingTuesday; Annie Collins, GivingTuesday
2012 Identifying High Potential New Donors and Impactful
Acquisition/communication Strategies
Philanthropy, Fundraising, and Giving
Individual
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
River Birch B
Participants:
Sympathy and guilt: Optimizing advertising appeals for charitable giving to Generation Z, Ronald Conlin, Pepperdine University; Steven Bauer, Pepperdine University
Donor Segments and Philanthropic Behavior in the United States, George Mitchell, City University of New York; Paige Rice, Hattaway Communications; Veronica Selzer, Hattaway Communications
Framing Nonprofit Overhead and Performance: Understanding the Influence of Messaging on Donor Decisions, Jessica Berrett, University of Colorado Colorado Springs; ChiaKo Hung, University of Pennsylvania; Ben Suykens, Ghent University
Who Are the Emerging Donors and How Can Fundraisers Respond: A View from the Frontlines, Michael Moody, Indiana University Lilly Family School of Philanthropy; Payton A. Goodman, IU Indianapolis
Chair: Mac-Jane Crayton, Appalachian State University
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22
2136 Power Dynamics
Open Track
Individual
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
Meeting Room 6
Participants:
Brokers & Fixers: Power Dynamics and Positionality in Civil Society Research in the Global South, Kelly Ann Krawczyk, Auburn University; Peter Weber, Auburn University; Bridgett King, University of Kentucky
Examining the Role of Power and Service Equity in GovernmentNonprofit Partnerships: NFCSP, Katyayani Strohl, University of Houston; Samira Ali, University of Houston
Preparing a nonprofit teaching case through a social justice lens, Steve Mumford, University of New Orleans
Chair: Jill Sinha, Arsin Partners
1926 Researching Ethical, Moral and Religious Aspects of Philanthropy
Nonprofits, Philanthropy, and Voluntary Action in the Humanities Panel
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
Hickory
Participants:
Using a Community Center Case Study to Research Black American Collectivism and Justice Work, Falen Pope, IU Indianapolis
The Intersection of Human Flourishing and Philanthropy: Insights from an Ethical Perspective, Dennis Kilama, IU Indianapolis
Answering the Question of Reparations Through Critical Ethical Analysis in Philanthropy, Iman Fathima Sheik Abdullah, IU Indianapolis
Applying the Islamic Concept of IHSAN to Study Community Organizations Involved in Social Justice, Abdul Samad, Indiana University
Chair: David King, IU Indianapolis
1886 Resilience: A Case Study on Further Enriching the Quality of the Nonprofit-government Partnership.
Public Policy, Law, Regulation, and Advocacy Colloquium
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
Meeting Room 11
Chairs: Wil Alston, Wil Alston Group, City and County of Denver - Office of Nonprofit Engagement; Julia Mahoney, City and County of Denver - Office of Nonprofit Engagement
Discussants: Wil Alston, Wil Alston Group; Julia Mahoney, City and County of Denver - Office of Nonprofit Engagement
Presenters:
Wil Alston, Wil Alston Group, Center for Nonprofit Resilience; Julia Mahoney, City and County of Denver - Office of Nonprofit Engagement
2039 Revenue Strategies
Governance, Leadership and Management
Individual
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
Meeting Room 12
Participants:
Organizational Capacity, Resource Environment, and Board Involvement: Why Do Nonprofits Diversify Their Revenue?, Shanshan Guan, Beijing University of Technology; Qiang Dong, China Agricultural University; Jiahuan Lu, Syracuse University
How to retain donor support: Direct and indirect effects of transparency and dialogue on giving, Gina Rossi, University of Udine; Chiara Leardini, University of Verona; Stefano Landi, University of Verona; Luca Piubello Orsini, University of Verona
Nonprofit Commercialization in Social Care: Impact on Quality Rating and Mediating Effects of Deprivation Level, Meng Ye, Georgia State University
The Impact of Revenue Diversification and Composition by the Nature of Service, Su Young Choi, University of Georgia
Chair: Roland Kushner, Muhlenberg College
2133 Street Level Bureaucracy and Co-Production Conference Theme
Individual
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
Meeting Room 16
Participants:
Exploring Street level bureaucrats’ Perception of Administrative Burden in Nonprofit Homeless Prevention Service Delivery, Royal SremSai, State University of New York Albany
Serving the People Wholeheartedly? Communism Education and Voluntary Coproduction, Huafang Li, University of Pittsburgh
Street Level Bureaucrats at Nonprofit 988 Crisis Centers: Shaped by and Reshaping Policy, Theresa Anasti, Washington University in St. Louis; Dani Adams, University of Missouri-Columbia; Gabriela Musickant, Washington University in St. Louis; Rachana Cheu, Washington University in St. Louis; Morgan Shields, Washington University in St. Louis
Feeling (Dis)Invited to Co-produce: Examining the Role Social discrimination and Self-efficacy on Co-Production, Jongmin Lee, Indiana University Bloomington; Apolonia Calderon, University of Maryland College Park
Chair: Kara Wentworth, La Salle University
2018 The Cause of the Effect: Exploring Causation in the Social Sector
Advances in Data and Methodology
Individual
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
Rock Creek A
Participants:
Clarifying Correlation and Causation: A Guide to Modern Quantitative Causal Inference in Nonprofit Studies, Andrew Heiss, Georgia State University; Meng Ye, Georgia State University
Evaluating Donor Preferences in Middle-Income Countries: A Conjoint Survey Experiment in Brazil, Flavio Pinheiro, José Luiz Egydio Setúbal Foundation, Graduate School of Public Policy at Federal University of ABC (UFABC, Brazil)
Is CSV an implementable strategic management?, Yoshiho Matsunaga, Osaka University of Commerce; Femida Handy, University of Pennsylvania
COVID-19 experience and charitable giving: A quasi-experimental exploration using the Philanthropy Panel Study, Timothy W. Krause, Claremont Graduate University; William D. Crano, Claremont Graduate University
Chair: Diana Kamwibua, James Madison University
1883 The Challenges of Researching Philanthropy: The Particular Challenges and Complexities of Studying the Ford Foundation
Nonprofits, Philanthropy, and Voluntary Action in the Humanities Colloquium
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
Meeting Room 7
Chair:
Mark Sidel, University of Wisconsin Madison Presenters:
Bhekinkosi Moyo, University of Witwatersrand; Rachel Wimpee, Rockefeller Archive Center; Mark Sidel, University of Wisconsin Madison
2082 The Global Landscape of Civil Society: Scope, Scale & Activity
Global Civil Society, Social Movements, and Grassroots Associations
Individual
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
Meeting Room 13
Participants:
Testing Social Origins Theory: An Analysis of Third Sector Organizations in Iceland, Dr. Jeannie Entenza, University of Minnesota; Kelly LeRoux, University of Illinois Chicago
Explaining the Distribution of Women’s Nonprofits in the United States: Demand, Supply, and Political Culture, Ying Liu, Rutgers University; Hanjin Mao, University of Houston Downtown; Jiahuan Lu, Syracuse University
Testing the Government Failure and Heterogeneity: A New Empirics for Asian Democracy, Akinobu Ogawa, Niigata University; Naoto Yamauchi, Japan Association of Social Relations
African civil society identities: Embeddedness, mimicry, hybridity, and alterity, Jacob Mati, Centre on African Philanthropy and Social Investments (CAPSI), Wits Business School The University of the Witwatersrand Chair: Mark Hager, Arizona State University
1889 TIBS Colloquium: What is The Grounded Theory Approach?: Principles, Challenges, and Contributions to Nonprofit Research
Advances in Data and Methodology
Colloquium
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
Rock Creek B
Chairs: Tamaki Onishi, University of North Carolina Greensboro; Danbi Seo, Arizona State University
Discussant: Jaclyn Piatak, University of North Carolina Charlotte
Presenters:
Genevieve Shaker, IU Indianapolis; Alisa Moldavanova, University of Delaware; Shawn Flanigan, San Diego State University
2048 Volunteering and the Public Good Voluntarism and Volunteering
Individual
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
Meeting Room 2
Participants:
Volunteering as a pathway to nonprofit and public employment, an analysis of millennials, Tiana Marrese, University of Pennsylvania; Femida Handy, University of Pennsylvania
What does trust have to do with it? Social Trust and the Voluntary CPR, Jessica Word, University of Nevada Las Vegas
Okay, Boomers: Volunteering Trends and the Future of Poll Workers, Vicki Lavastida, University of Oklahoma
1899 A Multi Actor Approach to Creating Volunteer Opportunities for Older Adults to Tackle Social Isolation
Voluntarism and Volunteering Colloquium
11:00 AM to 12:00 PM
Anacostia F
Fitting
DAVID C. CAMPBELL
Faith
REBECCA A. GLAZIER
ELIZABETH A. TRYON, HALEY C. MADDEN, AND CORY SPRINKEL
Democracy Vouchers and the Promise of Fairer Elections in Seattle
JENNIFER A. HEERWIG AND BRIAN J. MCCABE Political Lessons from American Cities series
Asian American Connective Action in the Age of Social Media
Civic Engagement, Contested Issues, and Emerging Identities
JAMES S. LAI
Citizenship and Governance in a Changing City Somerville, MA SUSAN OSTRANDER
Money for Change
Social Movement Philanthropy at the Haymarket People’s Fund
SUSAN OSTRANDER
We are proud to be one of the sponsors for the Governance Section Dinner in partnership with the ARNOVA Governance Section. We hope to see you there!
Additionally, the Nonprofit Academic Centers Council (NACC) will be hosting a reception at the Bush School DC Teaching Site located at 1620 L St. NW. Check out the DC Teaching Site while you’re in town!
2023 Built for Texas Report Brown, W., & Rosser, W. (2023). A Framework for Creating Systems Change. The Foundation Review, 15(4). https://doi.org/10.9707/1944-5660.1678
Robichau, R. W. & Bryan, T.K., & Lee, J. Sharing evaluation information to strengthen nonprofit accountability: The influence of learning and data utilization practices. Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly. doi.org/10.1177/08997640241230884 (Online First)
Look for our CNP Faculty and Staff at the panels and discussions this week!
Look for our CNP Faculty and Staff at the panels and discussions this week!
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22
Chair:
Andrea Robles, AmeriCorps
Presenters:
Atalaya Sergi, AmeriCorps; Melissa Gouge, AmeriCorps;
Analise Gammel, Serve Virginia, State Service Commission; Ayana Allen-Handy, Drexel University
Volunteering for Critical Public Services: The Case of the Coast Guard Auxiliary, Jessica Sowa, University of Delaware; James Kendra, University of Delaware
Chair: Samir Abu-Rumman, UMR
2014 Advances in Nonprofit Research Methodology
Advances in Data and Methodology
Individual
11:00 AM to 12:00 PM
Rock Creek A
Participants:
Using Generative AI to Amplify Nonprofit Customer Voices, Alissa Stover, Stand Together Foundation; Matt Kail, Stand Together Foundation; Hien Pham, STF - USA
“What’s in a Name?” A Critique of Bayesian Racial Inference Algorithm for the Nonprofit Sector, Thema Monroe-White, George Mason University; Cathleen Clerkin, Candid; Nathan Grasse, Carleton University; Jesse Lecy, Arizona State / Urban Institute
Empowering Behavioral Nonprofit and Philanthropy Studies: The Application of Neuromarketing Techniques, Tianyi Li, University of Texas Dallas
Chair: Faith Ann Butcher, Eastern University
1981 Advancing Data Infrastructure for the Nonprofit Sector: A Tour of New Resources and Tools
Professional Development Workshop
11:00 AM to 12:00 PM
Meeting Room 11
Presenters:
Tiana Marrese, University of Pennsylvania; Thiya Poongundranar, Urban Institute
2100 Advancing Nonprofit Training and Education Open Track
Individual
11:00 AM to 12:00 PM
Meeting Room 16
Participants:
Nonprofit leadership in Action Learning: Empowering democracy and belonging, Terry Fernsler, James Madison University
A Pilot Study on Community-Centered Service Learning in Nonprofit Management Education, Dyana Mason, University of Oregon
Enhancing Participation in the Non-profit Sector Using ServiceLearning from a Business School, Taslim Alade, Erasmus University; Lucas Meijs, Rotterdam School of Management, Erasmus University
Chair: Christina Dressel, The Ohio State University
2033 Arts and Culture: Long-Term Sustainability, and Internal and External Policymaking and Implementation Governance, Leadership and Management
Individual 11:00 AM to 12:00 PM River Birch B
Participants:
The Overlooked Pillar: Making a Case for Cultural Sustainability, Alisa Moldavanova, University of Delaware
Evaluating DEAI Commitments in Nonprofit Art Museums: Trends and Approaches, Wen Guo, Florida State University; Qiaochu Wang, Florida State University
Assessing Equity Policy Reform Implementation: NYC Cultural Development Fund Policy Changes and Impacts on Nonprofits, Brenda Bushouse, University of Massachusetts; Eric Griffith, Duke University
Chair: Kate Barr, University of Minnesota
1937 COVID Civil Society and Government Responses during the COVID-19 Crisis in East Asia
Collaboration: In, Between, and Among Sectors
Panel
11:00 AM to 12:00 PM
Meeting Room 9
Participants:
Governmental and Nonprofit Responses to Covid in China: A Systematic Review of the Burgeoning Literature, Mark Sidel, University of Wisconsin Madison
Shedding Light on Vulnerable Population: Civil Society Organizations during the COVID-19 Pandemic in Japan, Aya Okada, Tohoku University
Pandemic Governance: The collaboration dynamics of government and civil society against COVID-19 in South Korea, Bok Gyo Jeong, Kean University; Sung-Ju Kim, North Carolina State University
Chair: Bok Gyo Jeong, Kean University
Discussant: Mark Sidel, University of Wisconsin Madison
2065 Emerging Issues in Philanthropy
Philanthropy, Fundraising, and Giving
Individual
11:00 AM to 12:00 PM
Rock Creek B
Participants:
Does philanthropy have an image crisis? Evidence from U.S. newspaper articles from 1840-2023, Dominik Meier, University of Basel Mapping a Nonprofit Ecosystem and Assessing Service Area, Christopher Prentice, University of North Carolina Wilmington; Richard Clerkin, University of North Carolina Wilmington; Mark Imperial, UNC Wilmington; Anup Phayal, UNC Wilmington
Chair: Anthoanette Kommeh, Kennesaw State University
2137 Factors Affecting Giving
Philanthropy, Fundraising, and Giving
Individual
11:00 AM to 12:00 PM
Rock Creek C
Participants:
Charitable Giving to K-12 Education in the U.S.: Results from a National Poll, Fredrik O Andersson, IU Indianapolis; Ebba Henrekson, Marie Cederschiöld University; Jurgen Willems, WU Vienna University of Economics and Business
Effect of Video on Donation Readiness, Madeleine Alegria, Giving Compass
Chair: Joannie Tremblay-Boire, University of Maryland
2159 Federal Data for Nonprofit Researchers
Professional Development Workshop
2:00 PM to 3:00 PM
Anacostia F
Presenters:
Alan Abramson, George Mason University; Julia Beckhusen, Census Bureau; Mary Hyde, AmeriCorps; David Talan, Bureau of Labor Statistics; Takashi Yamashita, Bureau of Economic Analysis; Grace Lim, Fiscal Service
1925 From Olives to Olive Oil: Co-creating Collaborative Research in Non-Western Settings
Professional Development Workshop
11:00 AM to 12:00 PM
Hickory
Presenters:
Khaldoun AbouAssi, American University; Michal Almog-Bar, Hebrew University of Jerusalem; Catherine Herrold, Syracuse University
2062 Insights into Donor Motivations
Philanthropy, Fundraising, and Giving
Individual
11:00 AM to 12:00 PM
Meeting Room 4
Participants:
Meaning less: The curious case of plasma donation, Sam Norton, Brigham Young University; Travis Ashby, Brigham Young University; Curtis Child, Brigham Young University
The Missing Fat Belly: Empirical Study of Medium-rich Philanthropy, Divya Sethi, Erasmus University; Lucas Meijs, Rotterdam School of Management, Erasmus University; Marius Van Dijke, Rotterdam School of Management
How did Giving Behaviors Change during COVID-19 Pandemic, Sumedha Gupta, IUPUI Department of Economics; Una Osili, IU Indianapolis; Xiao Han, IU Indianapolis
Chair: Luisa Boyarski, Georgetown University
1994 Intersection of Financial and Social Impact Categories in Management of Social Enterprises
Innovation and Entrepreneurship
Individual
11:00 AM to 12:00 PM
Meeting Room 3
Participants:
Untangling the Role of Government Support on Social Entrepreneurship Performance: Financial and Non-Financial Support, Nara Yoon, James Madison University; Jin Young Lee, Loyola University Maryland; Chong Kyoon Lee, James Madison University
The Role of Nonprofit Incubators in Fostering Social Innovation and Measuring Social Impact, Marina Saitgalina, Old Dominion University; Jesus N Valero, Department of Political Science, University of Utah
If Not for Management, for What? A Systematic Literature Review of Nonprofit Innovation, John Ronquillo, University of Maryland College Park
Chair: William Brown, Texas A&M University
2130 New Advocacy Research
Open Track
Individual
11:00 AM to 12:00 PM
Meeting Room 8
Participants:
Incorporating Epistemologies of the South in Global North NGOs: Decolonizing NGO Political Advocacy, Paola Briones, University of Nebraska Omaha
Exploring the Influences of Historical and Contemporary Policies on the Nonprofit Landscape in Los Angeles, Sara Terrana, Adelphi University
Lobby for the greater good: The effect of government funding on grassroots lobbying opportunities, Ruodan Zhang, University of Connecticut
Chair: Seth Meyer, Bridgewater State University
2029 Nonprofit Leadership: How Founder Ideology, Organizational Culture, and Climate Affect Staff and Volunteer Experiences
Governance, Leadership and Management
Individual
11:00 AM to 12:00 PM
Meeting Room 12
Participants:
Is There Need for Trauma-Informed Climate in Volunteer Organizations and How can it be Measured?, Kate Watson, University of California Los Angeles; Yesi Camacho Torres, University of California Los Angeles; Juan Nunez, University of California, Los Angeles; Anthony Garcia, University of California, Los Angeles
Ideology and Nonprofit Leadership, Christopher Collins, Pepperdine University; Regan Schaffer, Pepperdine University
Chair: Shaun Khurana, Indiana University Bloomington
2132 Perceptions of The Nonprofit Sector
Conference Theme
Individual
11:00 AM to 12:00 PM
Meeting Room 10
Participants:
Trust across Government & Community:The Role of Public Service Motivation & Sense of Community Responsibility, Neil Boyd, Bucknell University; Branda Nowell, North Carolina State University; Jaclyn Piatak, University of North Carolina Charlotte
Youth perceptions of Non-profit Organisations as a Contributor to Dignified and Fulfilling Work in Africa, Wycliffe Nduga Ouma, University of Witwatersrand; Dennis Boahene Osei, University of Witwatersrand; Jacob Mati, University of Witwatersrand; Eleanor Meda Chipeta, University of Witwatersrand
Who cares about the voluntary sector? Perspective from the UK and the US, Oluwaferanmi Adeyemo, Sheffield Hallam University
Chair: Jongmin Lee, Indiana University Bloomington
2036 Perspectives on corporate involvement in voluntary and charitable initiatives.
Collaboration: In, Between, and Among Sectors
Individual 11:00 AM to 12:00 PM
Meeting Room 13
Participants:
Does Shareholder Presence Impact the Service Quality of Social Enterprises? Comparing Nonprofit and For-profit CICs, Janelle Kerlin, Georgia State University; Jeongyoon Yang, Georgia State University; Dana Brakman Reiser, Brooklyn Law School; Kelly Hall, University of Birmingham
Charity checkouts: (Potential) downsides for customers, nonprofits and businesses involved., Tine Faseur, KU Leuven; Tine De Bock, KU Leuven
Diffusion of voluntary socio-environmental programs among climateexposed mining companies. The role of trade and investment., Elizabeth Echavarria, University of Washington
Chair: Hee Soun Jang, University of North Texas
2060 Religious Perspectives on Philanthropy Philanthropy, Fundraising, and Giving
Individual
11:00 AM to 12:00 PM
Meeting Room 14
Participants:
Enhancing Philanthropy through Distributed Ledger Technology: A Study on US Muslims’ Perspectives., Roqaya Diyab, New York University; Mohannad Mofawaz, IU Indianapolis
Religion-Based Solidarity: A Distinct Category in the Philanthropic Landscape?, Sarah Maes, University of Antwerp, Catholic University of Leuven; Sylvie Van Dam, Odisee University of Applied Science; Mieke Schrooten, University of Antwerp; Peter Raeymaeckers, Uantwerpen; Bert Broeckaert, Catholic University of Leuven Islam, solidarity, and giving: a comparative study of Muslim RSIs and Muslim Philanthropy, Sarah Maes, University of Antwerp
Chair: Andy Vance, The Ohio State University
2151 Volunteer Database
Voluntarism and Volunteering Colloquium
11:00 AM to 12:00 PM
Meeting Room 15
Chair: Samir Abu-Rumman, UMR
2134 Volunteer Recruitment and Retention
Voluntarism and Volunteering
Individual
11:00 AM to 12:00 PM
River Birch A
Participants:
How to Keep them Inside? Individual and Organizational Factors Affecting Retention Among Volunteers for Refugees, Maikel Meijeren, Radboud Universiteit
Implications of the Pandemic on Recruitment and Retention of Volunteers and Donors in the U.S., Daniel Choi, University of Pennsylvania; Anna Ferris, University of Pennsylvania; Tiana Marrese, University of Pennsylvania; Ram Cnaan, University of Pennsylvania; Femida Handy, University of Pennsylvania
Chair: Tererai Sithole, University of Agder
2045 Volunteering in crisis and disaster situations
Voluntarism and Volunteering
Individual
11:00 AM to 12:00 PM
Meeting Room 2
Participants:
Disaster Preparedness and Citizen Response: How does Pre-disaster Preparedness Impact Citizens’ Behavior after a Disaster?, Peiyao Li, Sam Houston State University
Sustaining co-production through turbulent times: Insights from a longitudinal study, Caitlin McMullin, Roskilde University
Disaster volunteer training programs: A comparative study in Japan and the United States, Akiko Iizuka, Utsunomiya University
Chair: Diana Kamwibua, James Madison University
1979 “Getting Your Book Published: From Idea to Proposal to Press”
Professional Development Workshop
11:00 AM to 12:00 PM
Meeting Room 5
Presenter:
David Suarez, University of Washington
Gregory Witkowski, Columbia University
Awards Luncheon
12:00 PM to 1:30 PM
Potomac Ballroom
1868 A Relational Approach to NGOs in Global Politics: Beyond Cooperation and Competition
Collaboration: In, Between, and Among Sectors
Panel
2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Meeting Room 9
Participants:
Beyond Cooperation and Competition: NGO-NGO Interactions in World Politics, Maryam Zarnegar Deloffre, George Washington University
NGO Mergers and Acquisitions: A Social Relational Perspective, Hans Peter Schmitz, University of San Diego
Coordinating Civil Society? How NGO Associations Navigate Transnational Collaboration, Mary Kay Gugerty, University of Washington
NGO-NGO Interactions, Brazil’s Counterterrorism Legislation, and Beyond, Susan Appe, State University of New York Albany
Chair: Cristina Balboa, City University of New York
2020 Advancements in Artificial Intelligence and Nonprofits
Conference Theme
Individual
2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Meeting Room 16
Participants:
Artificial Intelligence policies and the nonprofit sector, Wendy Chen, Texas Tech University
Addressing the Promise and Peril of AI for Nonprofit Management Through a Data Feminist Pedagogy, Billie Sandberg, Portland State University; Rafeel Wasif, Portland State University; Laura Hand, University of North Dakota
Get a degree here, take it everywhere
The Trachtenberg School of Public Policy and Public Administration
TSPPPA’s graduate students and alumni shape the future in public policy, public administration, environmental and sustainability policy, and much more.
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Degree offerings include:
MA, MPA, MPP, PHD, and Certificates in Nonprofit Management, Budget & Public Finance, Data Science, GIS, Regulatory Policy and Practice, and more
Shaping Ethical and Responsible Artificial Intelligence (AI): The Role of Nonprofits in AI Governance, Kayla Schwoerer, University at Albany, State University of New York Albany; Kathryn Taleporos, University at Albany, SUNY
Chair: Oluwaferanmi Adeyemo, Sheffield Hallam University
1878 CGA Colloquy: Celebrating the Research and Civic Impact of Political Science Professor John DiIulio, Jr.
Global Civil Society, Social Movements, and Grassroots Associations Colloquium
2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Meeting Room 13
Discussants: Lia Howard, University of Pennsylvania; Stephanie Boddie, Baylor University
Presenters:
Catherine Wilson, Villanova University; Nisha Botchwey, University of Minnesota; Stephen Danley, Rutgers University; David Hodge, Arizona State University; Jill Sinha, Arsin Partners;
Hara Wright-Smith, Community Reinvestment Consulting; Rebecca Padot, University of Pennsylvania
1927 Critical Perspectives on Nonprofit/Civil Society
Participation in and Response to Polarizing Politics Conference Theme Panel
2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Meeting Room 5
Participants:
There Are No Lone Wolves: The Role of Civil Society in Aiding Domestic Terrorists, Roseanne Mirabella, Kean University; Geoffrey Upton, Seton Hall University; Carol RedWing, University of Nebraska at Omaha; Lauren Willner, San Diego State University
The ideological mechanisms through which philanthropy contributes to the mainstreaming of right-wing populism, Adam Saifer, University of British Columbia Okanagan; Fahad Ahmad, Toronto Metropolitan University
“Only stressful for those who are truly doing the work”:Nonprofit responses to polarizing politics, Kimberly Wiley, University of Florida; Karen McGilvery, University of Florida
Intersectional coalitions across race, gender, faith, and laborenvironment to build power to affect policy change, Jennifer Dodge, State University of New York Albany
Chair: Fahad Ahmad, Toronto Metropolitan University
Discussant: Sarah Young, Kennesaw State University, Kennesaw State University
1866 Engaging with the Media in Dynamic Times
Professional Development Workshop
2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Meeting Room 10
Chair: Beth Gazley, Indiana University Bloomington
Presenters:
Beth Gazley, Indiana University Bloomington; Brian Mittendorf, Ohio State University; Una Osili, IU Indianapolis
1955 Equitable Giving Lab
Philanthropy, Fundraising, and Giving Panel
2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Meeting Room 6
Participants:
Less than 2% of giving: Observations from five years of the Women & Girls Index, Jacqueline Ackerman, IU Indianapolis; Jon Bergdoll, IU Indianapolis; Una Osili, IU Indianapolis
LGBTQ+ philanthropy: A 10-year retrospective, Jon Bergdoll, IU Indianapolis; Jacqueline Ackerman, IU Indianapolis; Sarah King Bhetaria, Indiana University Lilly Family School of Philanthropy
Establishing the BIPOC Index: Year 1 challenges, Una Osili, IU Indianapolis; Jon Bergdoll, IU Indianapolis; Jacqueline Ackerman, IU Indianapolis; Jon Durnford, DataLake Nonprofit Research
Intersectionality and nonprofits: Defining the data and initial findings, Jacqueline Ackerman, IU Indianapolis; Jon Bergdoll, IU Indianapolis; Jon Durnford, DataLake Nonprofit Research
Chair: Jon Bergdoll, IU Indianapolis
Discussant: Jon Bergdoll, IU Indianapolis
2010 Ethics and Practice of Justice Based and Inclusive
Grantmaking
Nonprofit Finance
Individual
2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Rock Creek B
Participants:
Philanthropy and Rights of Philanthropic Recipients, Huitan Xu, IU Indianapolis
The Philosophy and Practice of Justice Philanthropy: An Integrative Framework, Susan Phillips, Carleton University; Tobias Jung, University of St Andrews; Keratiloe Mogotsi, Chatham University; Melissa Wilson, Carleton University
Participatory Grantmaking: Supporting Undocumented Immigrants, Pamala Wiepking, IU Indianapolis; Eline Crins, Kansfonds, Vrije Universiteit; Arjen De Wit, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Chair: Malika Ouacha, Erasmus University
1862 Exploring Social Entrepreneurship and Social Enterprises
(SEE) Across Asia: An Institutional Perspective
Innovation and Entrepreneurship
Panel
2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Hickory
Participants:
Systematic Literature Review on Research on Asian Social Entrepreneurship and Social Enterprises, Tamaki Onishi, University of North Carolina Greensboro; Wolfgang Bielefeld, IU Indianapolis; Helen Liu, National Taiwan University
Exploring Asian Insights Towards a Modified Institutional Social Enterprise Framework, Janelle Kerlin, Georgia State University
Government Policy, Organizational Hybridity, and Ecology in the Social and Solidarity Economy: Insights from Korea, Bok Gyo Jeong, Kean University; Seongho An, University of Central Florida; Byung Min, Wayne State University
Chair: Byung Min, Wayne State University
Discussant: Fredrik O Andersson, Indiana University Indianapolis
1967 Faith, Philanthropy, and the Future of Communities
Philanthropy, Fundraising, and Giving Panel
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22
2:00 PM to 3:30 PM Meeting Room 7
Participants:
The Effects of Cultivating a Culture of Generosity on Resourcing FaithBased Organizations, Megan Pontes, Arizona State University
Gathered: The Role of Shared Resources in Institutional Life, Dustin Benac, Baylor University
Effects on Giving/Volunteering across Shared or Divergent Religiosity Measures within Households, David King, IU Indianapolis; Young-Joo Lee, Lilly Family School of Philanthropy
Implications for Trends in Philanthropic Giving Among Religious Disaffiliates, Gabel Taggart, University of Wyoming
Chair: David King, IU Indianapolis
1999 Gathering Data and Exploring Social Media for a Collaborative Future: Academics and Practitioners Working Together Voluntarism and Volunteering Colloquium
2:00 PM to 3:30 PM Meeting Room 2
Presenters:
Noel Landuyt, The University of Texas Austin; Sarah Jane Rehnborg, The University of Texas Austin; Betsy McFarland, CAWA, CVA, Adisa and Energize, Inc.; Katie Campbell, Skye Consulting
1921 Gender and the Nonprofit Sector: Current Understandings and Future Trajectories
Leading and Managing Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in Organizations Panel
2:00 PM to 3:30 PM Meeting Room 8
Participants:
Gender and Nonprofit Leadership: A Literature Review, Payton A. Goodman, IU Indianapolis; Yue Ming, IU Indianapolis; Young-Joo Lee, Lilly Family School of Philanthropy
Women’s Philanthropy: A Mixed Method Study of Women Donor Giving Motivations and Practices, Elizabeth Gillespie, University of Memphis; Ming Xie, University of Maryland Baltimore County Will I Be Welcome Here?: Creating Supportive Environments in Nonprofits for Transgender Individuals, Seth Meyer, Bridgewater State University; Lauren Dula, Binghamton University
The Reification of Gender in Nonprofit Employment Across One’s Lifetime: A Panel Study, Tiana Marrese, University of Pennsylvania; Ying Liu, Rutgers University; Femida Handy, University of Pennsylvania
Chair: Angela Eikenberry, University of Connecticut
Discussants: Tiana Marrese, University of Pennsylvania; Yue Ming, IU Indianapolis; Angela Eikenberry, University of Connecticut
2019 Hybrid Logics in Nonprofits Governance, Leadership and Management
Individual
2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Rock Creek C
Participants:
Theorizing Hybrid Organizing for Grand Challenges, Gorgi Krlev, ESCP Business School
Competing logics and commercialization: A framework for theorizing and assessing nonprofits, Ji Ma, The University of Texas Austin;
ChiaKo Hung, University of Pennsylvania
Corporate foundations:business or charity? A CDA of individual responses to competing logics in hybrid entities, Puck van Ipenburg-Hendriks, Erasmus University
Cardinal Directions: A Meta Analysis of the Prosocial Business Landscape, Kirsi Jarvis, Brigham Young University; Anna McKean, University of Utah; Eva Witesman, Brigham Young University
Chair: Tara Bryan, University of Tennessee Knoxville
1893 Implications of Contemporary Nonprofit and Public Policy Systems on Arts and Cultural Organizations and Initiatives Public Policy, Law, Regulation, and Advocacy Panel
2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
River Birch A
Participants:
Investigating Nonprofit Art Museums’ Public Benefit Practices, Kate Keeney, University of Maryland; Yuha Jung, University of Kentucky
Pandemic Programs’ Administrative Benefits and Burdens for Nonprofit Arts and Culture Organizations, Brenda Bushouse, University of Massachusetts; Tamara Keshecki, University of Massachusetts Amherst; Eric Griffith, Duke University
Friends with obligations: How are nonprofit organizations impacted by government evaluation requirements?, B. Kathleen Gallagher, Texas Tech University; Leigh Hersey, University of Louisiana Monroe
From Non-Places to Community Spaces: The Dynamics of Placemaking in Downtowns, Emily Nwakpuda, The University of Texas at Arlington; Karabi Bezboruah, University of Texas Arlington; Nazanin Ghaffari, State University of New York - ESF
Chair: Kate Keeney, University of Maryland
Discussant: B. Kathleen Gallagher, Texas Tech University
1901 Integrating Generative AI into Nonprofit Research: Examples, Best Practices, and Ethical Considerations
Advances in Data and Methodology
Colloquium
2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Rock Creek A
Chair: Viviana Wu, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Presenters: Megan LePere-Schloop, The Ohio State University; Thema Monroe-White, George Mason University; Jung Ho Choi, University of Pennsylvania
2050 Political Participation, Environmental Policy, Philanthropy and Public Policy
Public Policy, Law, Regulation, and Advocacy
Individual
2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Meeting Room 11
Participants:
The Dynamics of Facebook Democracy: Analyzing Engagement strategies of 501(C)(4) Political Organizations, Wen chen Denq, California Lutheran University; Jose Marichal, California Lutheran University; Danish Warsi, California Lutheran University
Did Financial Benefit-Sharing & Community Engagement Increase Residential Acceptance of Windmills & Environmental Protection Awareness?, Kyungmin Lee, University of Delaware,
University of Delaware; Sun-Jin Yun, Seoul National University; Ji Yong Myeong, Jeju National University
Chair: Honey Minkowitz, University of Nebraska Omaha
1924 Teaching Section Colloquium: Using Social Platforms for Collaborative Learning
Open Track
Colloquium
2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Meeting Room 4
Discussant: Jose Irizarry, North Carolina Central University
Presenters: Juan Rios, Seton Hall University; Elizabeth Dale, Grand Valley State University
Chair: Amml Hussein, Rutgers University
2127 Technology Conference Theme
Individual
2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Meeting Room 15
Participants:
Exploring the factors that impact technology adoption in nonprofit organizations, Hanjin Mao, University of Houston Downtown
Unlocking Knowledge Potential: The Role of IT Infrastructure Capabilities in Iranian NGOs’ Knowledge Management Practices, Sina Jangjoo, Florida State University; Elham Maleki Najafabadi, University of Nevada, Reno
Closing the Digital Health Gap: Telehealth Experiences of African American and Latino Populations, Albert Ferreira, Case Western Reserve University
Towards Digital Justice and Consolidated Resettlement Resources for New Americans: A Virginia Database Initiative, Margaret Webb, Virginia Tech; Sweta Baniya, Virginia Tech; Katrina Powell, Virginia Tech; Mona Rizvi, James Madison University; Michelle Dromgold-Sermen, George Mason University; Grant Rissler, University of Richmond; Layla Scott, Virginia Tech; Maya Kachab, George Mason University
Chair: Paloma Raggo, Carleton University
2085 The Realities of Democratic Recession, Backsliding, and “Uncivil Society”
Global Civil Society, Social Movements, and Grassroots Associations
Individual
2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Meeting Room 3
Participants:
Silent voices of NGOs and the democracy backsliding in Ghana, Johanna Izabella Aucamp, IIEMSA; Mohammed Awal Alhassan, Norsaac
Unveiling Uncivil Society Organizations in Education Policies, Mario Aquino Alves, Fundação Getulio Vargas; Catarina Segatto, Universidade de São Paulo; Andrea Pineda, Fundação Getulio Vargas - Escola de Administração de Empresas de São Paulo
Nongovernmental Organizations Survival in Hostile Environments: African Perspectives on Giving, Gifting, and Volunteering, Oatile Ramsay, Rutgers University
Chair: Shawn Maxwell, University of Nebraska Omaha
2070 Tools of Nonprofit Management
Governance, Leadership and Management
Individual
2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Meeting Room 12
Participants:
Developing a distinct field for nonprofit ethics: A research agenda, Isabel de Bruin Cardoso, Rotterdam School of Management, Erasmus University; Allison Russell, University of Texas Dallas; Minjung Kim, Syracuse University
Which nonprofit gets more resources? Exploring the roles of equity and transparency-centered practices, Jeongyoon Lee, University of Kentucky; Junoh Jeon, University of Kentucky; Yunjun Kim, Martin School of Public Policy and Administration, University of Kentucky; Kitae Lee, University of Kentucky
Separation of Powers Theory and Public Service Motivation in Nonprofit, Public, and Private Sector Managers, Richard Clerkin, University of North Carolina Wilmington; Robert Christensen, Brigham Young University; Romeo Abraham, UNC Wilmington
Native youth culture carrier programs replace U.S. juvenile justice approaches and sustain Indigenous Knowledge, Morghan Vélez Young, California State University Fresno
Chair: Khaldoun AbouAssi, American University
2064 Trust and Transparency in Giving
Philanthropy, Fundraising, and Giving
Individual
2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Meeting Room 14
Participants:
Exploring Trust Dynamics in TikTok Charitable Giving: A Sociological Approach with Luhmann’s Theory on Trust, Qiuyi Chen, Tohoku University
The effect of racial bias in charitable giving, Shinyoung Park, IU Indianapolis
Charity-based financing in the era of technology: A systematic literature review, Nihat Gümüş, Ibn Haldun Univeristy; Inzimam Ur Rehman, Ibn Haldun Univeristy
How Does Social Media Capital Interact with Offline Social Capital to Drive NGO Outcomes, Wenye Mao, Tohoku University; Yuko Nishide, Tohoku University
Chair: Genevieve Shaker, IU Indianapolis
2124 Understanding nonprofit perspectives in US and abroad Advances in Data and Methodology
Individual
2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
River Birch B
Participants:
Analysis of U.S. and Canadian Philanthropic Foundations’ Educational Grants Abroad, Soojung Lee, Harvard University
Unleashing the potential for data: Can new methodologies help solve data poverty?, Daniel King, Nottingham Trent University
Nonprofit Online Communication Strategies During Turbulent Times, Tianyu Chen, American University
Which social innovation policies matter from the perspective of thirdsector organizations? A Q methodology approach, Chin-Chang Tsai, National Sun Yat-sen University
Chair: Andrew Heiss, Georgia State University
1935 AI Management and Governance: Implications for Nonprofits Conference Theme Panel
4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
Rock Creek B
Participants:
An Integral Component: Conceptualizing Artificial Intelligence within the Organizational Space, Brandon Frye, The Ohio State University
Conceptualizing Roles for Civil Society Organizations in AI Governance, Sandy Zook, University of Colorado Denver; Megan LePere-Schloop, The Ohio State University
Laissez-Faire Harms: Algorithmic Biases in Generative Language Models, Thema Monroe-White, George Mason University; Evan Shieh, Young Data Scientists League; Faye-Marie Vassel, Stanford University; Cassidy Sugimoto, Georgia Institute of Technology
Chair: Megan LePere-Schloop, The Ohio State University Discussant: Long Tran, The Ohio State University
1915 Climate Displacement, Philanthropy, and Humanitarianism Open Track Colloquium
4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
Meeting Room 10
Chair: Abdul Samad, Indiana University Presenters:
Jonayed Hossain, IU Indianapolis; Sitashma Thapa, IU Indianapolis; Arishaa Khan, OBAT Helpers
2031 Constructing a Welcoming Context: The Role of Nonprofits in Migrant and Refugee Integration Global Civil Society, Social Movements, and Grassroots Associations
Individual
4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
Meeting Room 4
Participants:
Co-creation or advocacy? The role of volunteers in refugee integration services, Caitlin McMullin, Roskilde University On Immigrants’ Behalf?: Comparing Views of Immigrants and Organizations on Needed Integration Services & Policies, Grant Rissler, University of Richmond; Saltanat Liebert, Virginia Commonwealth University, Wilder School of Government and Public Affairs
Civic Integration of Displaced Youth: Nonprofits as Indicators of Community Wellbeing, Vernise Estorcien, Indiana University Indianapolis; Afshan Paarlberg, IU Indianapolis; Patricia Snell Herzog, Indiana University Lilly Family School of Philanthropy NGO Resilience Strategies During Humanitarian Crisis: The Case of Ukrainian Refugees in Czechia, Tara Bryan, University of Tennessee at Knoxville; Monica Lea, University of Nebraska Omaha
Chair: Matthew Bakko, Wayne State University
1934 Critical Perspectives on Identities and Equity in Nonprofit Spaces
Leading and Managing Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in Organizations Panel
4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
River Birch B
Participants:
Towards a Racialized Nonprofit Industrial Complex, Gregory Wilson, Ohio State University
Opportunity or Crisis? Exploring Revenue Streams and Mission Drift of BIPOC Nonprofits, Shuyi Deng, Indiana University; ChiaKo Hung, University of Pennsylvania; Jongmin Lee, Indiana University Bloomington
Major Gift Officers (MGOs) in Higher Education: How Personal Identity Interacts with Fundraising, Camtrice Botos Bexten, University of Nebraska Omaha
Chair: Shuyi Deng, Indiana University
Discussant: Roseanne Mirabella, Kean University
2101 DEI Initiatives and Support in Organizational Settings
Leading and Managing Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in Organizations
Individual
4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
Meeting Room 14
Participants:
Who Cares? An Experimental Analysis of Social Norms Influencing DEI Initiative Support among Employees, Zeeshan Noor, Louisiana State University; Jehanzeb Cheema, George Mason University
Effective Coaching for Afro-Diasporic Women in MajorityDominant Organizations: A Critical Realist, Grounded Theory Investigation, Susan McGuire, Case Western Reserve University; Diana Bilimoria, Case Western Reserve University
Economic Security and Mobility in the Nonprofit Workforce: An Intersectional Approach, Jodi Benenson, University of Nebraska Omaha; Leticia (Stacey) Tetteh, University of Nebraska Omaha; Jonathan Wong, University of Nebraska Omaha
Strategies and Challenges for Funders in North Carolina, Teshanee Williams, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Aaron Carpenter, The School of Government, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Kimalee Dickerson, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Chair: John Ronquillo, University of Maryland College Park
1988 ESS Colloquium: A Guided Tour: From a PhD Student to an Assistant Professor Open Track Colloquium
4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
Meeting Room 5
Presenters:
Thanh Minnie Hoang, Southern Connecticut State University; Shawn Maxwell, University of Nebraska Omaha
1997 Grantmaking and Foundations
Philanthropy, Fundraising, and Giving
Individual
4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
Meeting Room 7
Participants:
The long-term effects of matching grants in the emerging philanthropy sector: Evidence from China, Xiaoyun Wang, Renmin University of China
Analysis of granting patterns and economic contribution of foundations across the southwest, William Brown, Texas A&M University
The Power of Community Foundations: Idle or Emerging, Codi Smith, University of Pennsylvania
Chair: Noemi Oeding, Auburn University
1856 Internationalization and Shared Visions at ARNOVA: Perspectives from Regional and Common Interest Groups Open Track Colloquium
4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
Meeting Room 6
Chair:
Susan Appe, State University of New York Albany
Discussant:
Mark Sidel, University of Wisconsin Madison
Presenters:
Tamaki Onishi, University of North Carolina Greensboro; Sung-Ju Kim, North Carolina State University; Hanjin Mao, University of Houston Downtown; Bok Gyo Jeong, Kean University
2028 Mechanisms of Charitable Giving and Higher Education Philanthropy Philanthropy, Fundraising, and Giving
Individual
4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
Meeting Room 8
Participants:
A Systematic Review of the Literature of Alumni Engagement: The Antecedents, Mechanisms, and Consequences, Anastesia Okaomee, IU Indianapolis
The Internet Presence and Engagement Practices of Higher Education Institutions in Sub-Saharan Africa, Dennis Kilama, IU Indianapolis; Xiaonan Kou, IU Indianapolis
Conceptualizing Alumni Citizenship Behavior (ACB): A Qualitative Approach, Anastesia Okaomee, IU Indianapolis
Chair: Ximeng Chen, Sacred Heart University
1870 Nonprofit Entrepreneurship Cycle: Ideation, Entry, Expansion, Closure Innovation and Entrepreneurship Panel
4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
Meeting Room 3
Participants:
Who Creates New Nonprofits and Why? Characteristics of Nonprofit Founders, Mirae Kim, George Mason University
Nonprofit or For-Profit? A platform theory approach, Jeremy Thornton, Samford University; Jennifer Kuan, California State Monterey Bay
Information in the Nonprofit Sector: What do Donors Value?, Teresa Harrison, Drexel University; Jennifer Mayo, University of Missouri
Choosing When and How: Exploring Nonprofit Closure in Canada, Elizabeth Searing, The University of Texas Dallas; Nathan Grasse, Carleton University
Chair: Jeremy Thornton, Samford University
Discussant: Jeremy Thornton, Samford University
2067 Nonprofit Executives and Organizational Management Governance, Leadership and Management
Individual
4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
Meeting Room 12
Participants:
Becoming Boss: The Experiences of New Executive Directors of Community-Based Nonprofit Organizations, Melissa Mathews, California State University Long Beach
An African Perspective on Managerial Strategies for Nonprofit Resource Acquisition, Bunmi Lawoyin, University of Nebraska Omaha
What Determines Nonprofit Executive Compensation?: A Systematic Literature Review., Emily Robinson, North Carolina State University; Jessica Khan, North Carolina State University
Nonprofit Scandal, Succession, and Stability: Examining Public and Donor Expectations of Interim Executives, Travis Ruddle, Brigham Young University; Breck Wightman, Brigham Young University; Robert Christensen, Brigham Young University; Enoch Paxton, Brigham Young University
Chair: Mariam Ajmal, IU Lilly Family School of Philanthropy
2053 Nonprofits and Health Policy
Public Policy, Law, Regulation, and Advocacy
Individual
4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
Meeting Room 11
Participants:
South African National Health Insurance Policy Process 20072019: Private and third-sector lessons for BICS Countries, Neville Mangwiro, University of Witwatersrand, University of Johannesburg; Precious Tirivanhu, HSRC; Wilfred Lunga, HSRC
Volunteer Engagement Dynamics and Political Campaign Success: Evidence from the Arizona Abortion Access Ballot Initiative, Yunmeng Deng, University of Arizona; Suyeon Jo, University of Arizona
Chair: Jourdan Davis, UNC Charlotte
2076 Organizational Networks and Geographies of Collaboration
Collaboration: In, Between, and Among Sectors
Individual
4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
Meeting Room 9
Participants:
Research on the Evolution Mechanism of Transnational Networks of Science and Technology Associations, Sisi Tang, Tsinghua University
Proximity matters? Influence of Co-location and Physical Proximity on Nonprofits’ Collaborative Efforts, Jintak Kim, University of North Texas
Evolution of civil society in South Africa: Forms, roles, and relationships, Jacob Mati, Centre on African Philanthropy and Social Investments (CAPSI), Wits Business School The University of the Witwatersrand; Hlengiwe Ndlovu, University of Witwatersrand
Chair: Emily Smith, Ither
1970 Perceptions and Accountability: Innovative Ways of Involving Stakeholders
Conference Theme Panel
4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
Rock Creek C
Participants:
Currency of Culture: Unmasking the Impact of Charity Navigator’s Community and Culture Beacon, Salman Bin Habib, University of Texas Dallas; Elizabeth Searing, The University of Texas Dallas Municipal Leaders’ Perceptions of Stakeholders’ Influence on Environmental Sustainability in American Cities, Dragana Djukic-Min, University of Texas Dallas
Speaking the Language: Creating a Dictionary for Social Justice, Sercan Tas, University of Texas Austin; Pam Paxton, University of Texas at Austin Incentivising Charity Accountability: The Impact of Regulatory Action, Alasdair Rutherford, University of Stirling; Diarmuid McDonnell, “Third Sector Research Centre, University of Birmingham”; Alan Duggan, University of Stirling
Chair: Dominik Meier, University of Basel
1895 Reflections on hot-off-the-press data from the Current Population Survey Civic Engagement and Volunteering Supplement (CEV)
Conference Theme Colloquium
4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
Meeting Room 16
Chair:
Mary Hyde, AmeriCorps Presenters:
Laura Schlachter, AmeriCorps; Pam Paxton, The University of Texas Austin; Rebecca Nesbit, University of Georgia; Kristinn Már Ársælsson, Duke Kunshan University
2024 Serving communities: The impact and sustainability of arts and humanities in modern life
Nonprofits, Philanthropy, and Voluntary Action in the Humanities Individual
4:00 PM to 5:30 PM Hickory Participants:
College Towns and Creativity: Exploring Potential Interactions Between Educational Institutions and Local Cultural Economies, Trevor Meagher, University of Texas Arlington; Karabi Bezboruah, University of Texas Arlington; Jiwon Suh, University of Texas Arlington Strategic Management Models for Emerging Arts and Culture Nonprofits in Nigeria: A Global Perspective, Daniel A Kumapayi, University of Illinois Chicago, Àkójọpọ̀
Public libraries, placemaking and capacity: Do great libraries build great communities?, B. Kathleen Gallagher, Texas Tech University; Leigh Hersey, University of Louisiana Monroe; Virginia Finster, Texas Tech University
Chair: Samir Abu-Rumman, UMR
1900 The Benefits of Including Reviewing in Your Research Practice
Professional Development Workshop
4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
River Birch A
Presenters:
Elizabeth Dale, Grand Valley State University; Lindsey McDougle, Rutgers University; Peter Raeymaeckers, Uantwerpen; Dyana Mason, University of Oregon
1896 The Generosity Commission: The Shifting Landscape of American Generosity and Research Recommendations
Philanthropy, Fundraising, and Giving Colloquium
4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
Meeting Room 15
Chair: Alan Abramson, George Mason University
Presenters: Jane Wales, Aspen Institute; Benjamin Soskis, Urban Institute; Woodrow Rosenbaum, GivingTuesday; Victoria Vrana, GlobalGiving
2084 The Role of Civil Society in Democracy, Participation and Activism
Global Civil Society, Social Movements, and Grassroots Associations
Individual
4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
Meeting Room 13
Participants:
From charity to obsolescence? An evolutionary perspective of TNGOs, George Mitchell, City University of New York; Hans Peter Schmitz, University of San Diego, North Carolina State University
Convening Spaces: Mapping the Sites of Collective Civic Engagement, Matthew Baggetta, Indiana University; Brad Fulton, Indiana University; Julie Beasley, Indiana University; Jordan Hunter, Indiana University
Millennials and Gen Zs in Voluntary Associations: From Member Engagement to Political Participation, Cheon Lee, New Mexico State University
Disaggregating Civil Society-Democracy Linkages in the Global South: Poverty, Engagement, and CSO Types in Kenya, Janet Jock, Auburn University; Jennifer Brass, Indiana University O’Neill School of Public & Environmental Affairs; Matthew Baggetta, Indiana University
Chair: Abdul Samad, Indiana University
1882 TIBS Colloquium: Is Pluralism Dead? Nonprofits, Democracy, and the Challenge of Inclusive Engagement Conference Theme Colloquium
4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
Rock Creek A
Chair: Dr. Julie Langer, Northern Illinois University
Presenters:
Dr. Robbie Robichau, Texas A & M University; Kelly LeRoux, University of Illinois Chicago; Ruth Hansen, University of Wisconsin - Whitewater; Angela Eikenberry, University of Connecticut
2161 Early Scholars Section Annual 3-Minute Dissertation Competition
5:30 PM to 6:30 PM
Meeting Room 5
2165 Global Philanthropy Environment Index Meet and Greet (By invite only)
5:30 PM to 6:30 PM
Meeting Room 6
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23
2171 Theories, Issues and Boundaries Section (TIBS) Membership Meeting
5:45 PM to 6:30 PM Rock Creek A
2166 African Chapter of ARNOVA Meeting
5:45 PM to 6:45 PM Meeting Room 7
2172 Climate Change and Civil Society Common Interest Group
5:45 PM to 6:45 PM Meeting Room 8
2120 GITA Membership Meeting
5:45 PM to 6:45 PM Meeting Room 2
NVSQ Board Meeting
5:45 PM to 6:45 PM Meeting Room 4
2150 Teaching Section Business Meeting
5:45 PM to 6:45 PM Meeting Room 3
2149 Philanthropia Sponsor Reception
6:30 PM to 7:30 PM Rock Creek C
2148 Schar School of Policy & Government, George Mason University Sponsor Reception
6:30 PM to 7:30 PM Rock Creek B
2173 Theories, Issues and Boundaries Section (TIBS) Member Dinner
6:30 PM to 8:30 PM Hill Country BBQ
Saturday, November 23
2025 A Closer Look at Donor Advised Funds Philanthropy, Fundraising, and Giving Individual
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM Meeting Room 11
Participants:
Are Donor-Advised Funds Facilitating Opaque Givingto Politically Engaged Charities?, Helen Flannery, Institute for Policy Studies; Brian Mittendorf, Ohio State University
Charitable Objectives or Donor Interests? What Sponsor Language Reveals about Donor-Advised Fund Priorities, Helen Flannery, Institute for Policy Studies; Brian Mittendorf, Ohio State University
Donor Advised Funds, Anonymity and Controversial Causes, Rachel Cash, Indiana University Bloomington
Who Uses DAFs and Why?: Findings from the National Survey of Donor Advised Fund Donors, Dan Heist, Brigham Young University; Danielle Vance-McMullen, DePaul University; Rachel Sumsion, Brigham Young University; Jeff Williams, Dorothy A. Johnson Center for Philanthropy, Grand Valley State University
Chair: Jon Bergdoll, IU Indianapolis
1946 Advancing Foundation Research from Comparative Perspectives: Policy, Relationships with State and Market, and Emerging Trends
Conference Theme
Colloquium
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
Rock Creek B
Chair: Stefan Toepler, George Mason University
Presenters:
Stefan Toepler, George Mason University; Qun Wang, The University of Toledo; Tamaki Onishi, University of North Carolina Greensboro
1920 Building Sustainable Models Centered around Equity for Nonprofits
Collaboration: In, Between, and Among Sectors Panel
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
Meeting Room 2
Participants:
Empowering Community-Based Organizations Tackling Gun Violence: A CDC-Funded Initiative, Siani Butler, LaSalle University; Isabella Ntigbu, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Penn Injury Science Center
Bolstering Sustainability in Rural LGBTQ Organizations in the Midwest: A Cohort-Based Capacity Building Model, Roshawnda Washington, La Salle Unviersity
How National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration implements Equity for Tribes and Underserved Communities, Dr. Merlene Patrice Quispe, University of Minnesota
Academic and Nonprofit Partnerships Can Enhance Capacity-Building, Caitlin Taylor, La Salle University
Chair: Dr. Merlene Patrice Quispe, University of Minnesota
Discussant: Vernise Estorcien, Indiana University Indianapolis
2066 Burnout, Quiet-Quitting, and Sector Exit Governance, Leadership and Management
Individual 9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
Meeting Room 12
Participants:
Quiet Quitting in the Nonprofit Sector, Kayla Parker, University of Texas Dallas
Nonprofit Sector Adjacent Work– Individual, Organizational, and Sectoral Dynamics of Nonprofit Consulting, Kerry Kuenzi, University of Wisconsin Green Bay; Marlene Walk, Albert-LudwigsUniversität Freiburg; Amanda J. Stewart, North Carolina State University
Nonprofit Leader Burnout: Why and For Whom Nature Breaks Replenish Individuals’ Resources, Haley O’Steen, Pepperdine University; Hannah Schendel, Pepperdine University; Reka Anna Lassu, Pepperdine University; Charisma Greenfield, Pepperdine University; Brooke Stuart, Let Go and Grow
A Structural Empowerment Approach to Mitigating Burnout Among Middle Managers in the Human Services, Lauren Willner, San Diego State University; Emily Allison, San Diego State University
Chair: Johanna Izabella Aucamp, IIEMSA
1993 Charting the Philanthropic Frontier: Large Language Models and Digital Tracing
Advances in Data and Methodology
Individual 9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
Hickory
Participants:
The Character of a Place: Inductively Identifying Local Nonprofit Characteristics through Language Modeling, Simon Shachter, University of Connecticut
What Does AI Tell Us about the field of Philanthropic and Nonprofit Studies?, Jin Ai, University of Pennsylvania; Filipi Nascimento Silvia, Indiana University; Richard Steinberg, IU Indianapolis; Chao Guo, University of Pennsylvania
Simulated ChatGPT Experiments vs. Actual Experiments of Donor Behavior: AI Uses for Behavioral Nonprofit Research, Tianyu Chen, American University; Lewis Faulk, American University; Minjung Kim, Syracuse University; Jurgen Willems, WU Vienna University of Economics and Business
Using digital traces to study volunteering: Learning about Volunteer Sabbaticals through Open-Source Software, Curtis Atkisson, University of Washington; Philine van Overbeeke, The Gradel Institute of Charity, University of Oxford; Lucas Meijs, Rotterdam School of Management, Erasmus University; Brenda Bushouse, University of Massachusetts
Chair: Faith Ann Butcher, Eastern University
2073 Collaboration for the Design and Delivery of Human Services
Collaboration: In, Between, and Among Sectors
Individual
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
Meeting Room 9
Participants:
Community-Driven Care Systems: Case Management Technology as a Tool for Capacity and Relationship Building, Joshua-Paul Miles, Marquette University
Multisectoral Collaboration for the Overdose Crisis: The Role of Public and Private Syringe Service Programs, Theresa Anasti, Washington University in St. Louis
Cross-Cutting Design and Partnerships in Social Protection Programs in the MENA Region, Massumeh H. Toosi, IU Indianapolis
How Medicaid Expansion Influenced the Value of Health Equity Among Nonprofit Hospitals?, Yinman Zhong, North Carolina State University
Chair: Xiaoyang Xu, Georgetown University
2090 Contemporary Approaches and Strategies in Nonprofit Development
Open Track
Individual
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
Meeting Room 6
Participants:
Live or Die Puzzle: An Integrative Approach to Nonprofits’ Survivability during COVID-19, Ha Vien, North Carolina State University; Thanh Minnie Hoang, Southern Connecticut State University
Driving Sustainable Development: The Role of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) in Botswana’s Progress, Neville Mangwiro, University of Johannesburg, University of Witwatersrand
Rethinking Nonprofit Theory: A Critical Review of Emerging Concepts and Trends, Gabriela Daniel (form. Vacekova), Ambis University
Comparing and Contrasting the Scholarly and Social Media Influence of Nonprofit Experts, Prince Oricha, Auburn University; Astin Cole, Auburn University; Jude Ugwuoke, Auburn University
Chair: Emily Smith, Ither
1877 Crafting a Compelling Research Narrative: NVSQ Board
Members Discuss How to Make Your Research Interesting Professional Development Workshop
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM Rock Creek C
Presenters: Ram Cnaan, University of Pennsylvania; Kelly LeRoux, University of Illinois Chicago; Jennifer Mosley, University of Chicago; Michelle Shumate, Northwestern University
1945 Critical Perspectives on Funder Relationships: Questions of Influence, Power, and Transformative Potential Open Track Panel
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
Meeting Room 3
Participants:
Foundation control and pacification of nonprofits through the grantmaking process, Andrew Burk, University of Nebraska Omaha
How can philanthropy facilitate reparative justice?, Iman Fathima Sheik Abdullah, Indiana University Lilly Family School of Philanthropy
Philanthropy, Universities, and Pro-Palestine Protests, Fahad Ahmad, Toronto Metropolitan University; Adam Saifer, University of British Columbia Okanagan
Abolition and the Nonprofit Industrial Complex: Lessons in how StateNonprofit Funding Dynamics Contribute to Carcerality, Matthew Bakko, Wayne State University; Bethany Murray, University of California, Los Angeles
Chair: Matthew Bakko, Wayne State University
1903 Critical Perspectives on Nonprofit Organizing and Voluntary Action Open Track Panel
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
Meeting Room 7
Participants:
Critical Race Theory and Nonprofits: Rethinking Leadership and Governance, Stephen Danley, Rutgers University
Becoming SMART: A Case Study Examining the Formation of a Voluntary and Community Sector Professional, Daniel King, Nottingham Trent University
Pimped for Charity: A Feminist Analysis of Sexual Harassment in Fundraising, Erynn Beaton, The Ohio State University
Decolonizing Nonprofit, NGO & Development Higher Education: Valuing Indigenous Knowledge in the Majority World, Roseanne Mirabella, Kean University; Heather Carpenter, Notre Dame of Maryland University; Ibrahim Shafau, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Chair: Angela Eikenberry, University of Connecticut
Discussant: Roseanne Mirabella, Kean University
2037 Intergovernmental-Nonprofit Relationships: An International Perspective
Nonprofit Finance
Individual
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
Rock Creek A
Participants:
Context matters: the effects of environmental factors on the financial health of Chinese foundations, Chenxin Zhang, The University of Texas Austin; Ji Ma, The University of Texas Austin
A Relational Perspective on Nonprofit Financial Sustainability: Analyzing NPO-Funder Relationships in China, Shiqi Peng, The University of Hong Kong
The Development of Nonprofit-Government Relationships Under Fiscal Federalism, Ignacio Ruelas, University of Nebraska Omaha; Michael Lee, University of Nebraska Omaha
Exploring practices for transitioning from foreign aid dependency to financial sustainability among NGOs in Uganda., Dennis Kilama, IU Indianapolis
Chair: Jessica Berrett, University of Colorado Colorado Springs
1941 Moving Nonprofits Forward: Innovative Solutions for the Future Conference Theme Panel
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
Meeting Room 8
Participants:
Special Improvement Districts in New Jersey, Jung Ah (Claire) Yun, Kean University
Ethics polices for AI use in the nonprofit sector, Daniel Mallinson, Penn State Harrisburg
Unexpected challenges after an unprecedented event: Marketing nonprofits on social media, Wanzhu Shi, University of North Florida, Lauren Azevedo, University of North Carolina Charlotte; Ravij Seth, Penn State University
Are NPOs Stepping Stones for Big Opportunities? Support and Career Growth as Antidotes to Turnover?, Sina Jangjoo, Florida State University
Chair: Lauren Azevedo, University of North Carolina Charlotte Discussant: Lauren Azevedo, University of North Carolina Charlotte
2004 Multi-Sector Collaborations for Public Health Collaboration: In, Between, and Among Sectors
Individual
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM River Birch A
Participants:
Unveiling America’s Silent Struggle: Trying to Get Help during Material Hardship, Yeha Kim, Northwestern University; Peixin Hua, Penn State University; Kristy Park, Northwestern University; Michelle Shumate, Northwestern University
Unveiling the Bridge Builders: Exploring Distinctive Traits of Bridging Nonprofits in Public Health Network Domains, Shuwen Zhang, University of Illinois Chicago; Yashaswi Lal, University of Illinois Chicago; Kate Albrecht, University of Illinois Chicago
Value co-creation or value conflicts? Examining nonprofit-business collaborations in ESG practices, Chin-Chang Tsai, National Sun Yat-sen University
A Cross-Sector Collaboration to Integrate Produce Prescription and Commercial Weight Management: Outcomes and Lessons Learned, Kathleen Krzyzanowski Guerra, Ohio State University; Khawlah Al-Muhanna, MS, RDN, Ohio State University; Kate Garrity, MS, RD, University of Michigan; Hadley Pritchard, MPH, Mid-Ohio Food Collective; Jennifer Parsons, MSPH, Mid-Ohio Food Collective; Alexandra Lee, PhD, WW International, Inc.; Michelle Cardel, PhD, MS, RD, WW International, Inc.; Amy Headings, PhD, RD, LD, Mid-Ohio Food Collective; Jennifer Garner, PhD, RD, University of Michigan
Chair: Jungwon Yeo, University of Central Florida
2013 Navigating Contested Policy Areas: Narratives, Framing, and Nonprofit and Government Action
Conference Theme
Individual
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
River Birch B
Participants:
Cross-Sector Collaborative Dynamics: Immigrant Serving Nonprofits and Local Government Relationships in Two Cities, Kathryn Grossman, American University
Tower of Babel? Understanding DEIA Framing and Practices in Veteran Serving Nonprofits, Amanda Bankston, Syracuse University
Don’t Wake the Bear: How Narratives Shape Paradoxical CRT-DEI Political Activity in Alabama and Florida, Astin Cole, Auburn University; Jude Ugwuoke, Auburn University; Prince Oricha, Auburn University
Preaching the “Education Gospel”: A Case Study of Framing Contests in Cross-Sector Partnership, Amanda Jones-Layman, Neumann University
Chair: Barnabas Suva, James Madison University
2041 Nonprofit Finance in Crises
Nonprofit Finance
Individual
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
Meeting Room 5
Participants:
Determinants of Accountability in Nonprofit Organizations: Financial Factors or Board Control?, Jiwon Suh, University of Texas Arlington; Jiseul Kim, University of Texas Arlington
Beyond Payroll: The Impact of PPP Loans on Nonprofit Financial Strategies During A Crisis, Minji Hong, Georgia State University
Uptake of PPP Loans: Leverage, Size and Experience, Nathan Grasse, Carleton University; Jessica Word, University of Nevada Las Vegas; Marcus Lam, University of San Diego, School of Leadership and Education Sciences
Resilience in nonprofits: The role of mission and finance during COVID-19, Yunjun Kim, University of Kentucky; Jeongyoon Lee, University of Kentucky; Young Joo Park, “School of Public Administration, University of New Mexico”
Chair: Lucia Gomez Teijeiro, University of Geneva
1913 Philanthropy Embedded in Place
Philanthropy, Fundraising, and Giving Panel
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
Meeting Room 15
Participants:
The Enduring Influence of Local Logics on the Adoption of Community Impact Model, Wenpei You, IU Indianapolis; Megan LePere-Schloop, The Ohio State University; Laurie Paarlberg, Indiana University; Hyunseok Hwang, University of Houston
Linking Community Development and Economic development, Jeeson Oh, University of Louisville
How Foundations Respond to Social Movements: An Empirical Study of Social Justice Grantmaking, Viviana Wu, University of Massachusetts Amherst; Heather MacIndoe, University of Massachusetts Boston
Family Philanthropy in Mexico, Michael Moody, Michael Layton, Grand Valley State University; Michael Moody, Indiana University Lilly Family School of Philanthropy
Chair: Laurie Paarlberg, Indiana University
Discussant: Codi Smith, University of Pennsylvania
1922 Re-introducing Complexity into Behavioral Philanthropy Philanthropy, Fundraising, and Giving Panel
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
Meeting Room 14
Participants:
Why Do Canadians Give? Results from a New National Survey, Jyoti Aggarwal, University of Texas Dallas; Tianyi Li, University of Texas Dallas; Elizabeth Searing, The University of Texas Dallas
Going Viral: An Analysis of Hashtag Activism and its Influence on Philanthropic Giving, Julie M. Mercado, Bucknell University
Millennial funding trends: Where will we go from here?, Holly Miori, The University of Texas Dallas
Academic Philanthropy and Major Donors Preferences in Turbulent Times, Emily Nwakpuda, The University of Texas at Arlington; Jonathan Oxley, Georgia State University
Chair: Elizabeth Searing, The University of Texas Dallas
Discussant: Elizabeth Searing, The University of Texas Dallas
1892 Recommendations for Regulatory Reform: Implications for Research and Practice Conference Theme Colloquium
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM Meeting Room 16
Chair: Elizabeth Boris, Urban Institute
Discussant: Cindy Lott, IU Indianapolis
Presenters: Margaret Post, Clark University; Janet Kleinfelter, Office of the Tennessee Secretary of State; Lloyd Hitoshi Mayer, University of Notre Dame’s The Law School
2160 Section Leaders Meeting (by invitation)
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM Sycamore
2079 The Dynamics of Power, Policy, and Priorities in Civil SocietyGovernment Relations
Global Civil Society, Social Movements, and Grassroots Associations
Individual
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
Meeting Room 13
Participants:
The Power of the Civil Society in Israel amid Judiciary Upheavals, Dorit Bar Nir, Ariel University; Shani Pitcho, Ben Gurion University; Michal Mahat Shamir, Ariel University
How Do Human Rights Organizations Manage their Relationships with Government?, Christopher Einolf, Northern Illinois University
Understanding the Changing Face of Community Development in India: A rural, grassroots perspective, Prerna Rana, University of Wisconsin Madison
How Do Employees At Social Movement Organizations’ Perceive The Nonprofit Industrial Complex?, Michael Blecher, Adelphi University
Chair: Mario Aquino Alves, Fundação Getulio Vargas
1940 The Lack of Female Leadership in Faith-Based Nonprofits: Donors, Leaders, and Scholars Collaborating for Change
Collaboration: In, Between, and Among Sectors
Colloquium
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
Meeting Room 10
Presenters:
Nikki Toyama-Szeto, Sider Center / Christians for Social Action; Amy Reynolds, Wheaton College; Ari deJonge, Micah 6:8
1995 The Role of Voice, Resources, and Coalitions in Nonprofit Advocacy
Public Policy, Law, Regulation, and Advocacy
Individual
9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
Meeting Room 4
Participants:
Exploring the Expressive Nature of Nonprofit Policy Advocacy: Sex Education Organizations in the Post-Dobbs Era, Shelly Arsneault, California State University Fullerton; Meeyoung Lamothe, University of Oklahoma
Advocacy Coalitions and US Sanctuary Policy Debate: What’s the Place of Nonprofit Organizations Here?, Omowonuola Fayemiro, University of Illinois Chicago
The Role of Resources and Political Environment in Shaping Nonprofit Advocacy Strategies, Qiaozhen Liu, Florida Atlantic University; Hala Altamimi, University of Kansas
Voices From the Sector: Nonprofit Advocacy in Turbulent Times, Heather MacIndoe, University of Massachusetts Boston; Mirae Kim, George Mason University; Lewis Faulk, American University
Chair: Cynthia W. Rojas, PhD, Rojas Blakely & Associates
1974 A Plethora of Taxonomies? Sense-making Through Sector
‘Maps’, ‘Tribes’, Language Models, and Ontologies. Advances in Data and Methodology Panel
11:00 AM to 12:30 PM
Meeting Room 15
Participants:
“There’s a War Going On”: How Service and Advocacy Organizations Understand the “Right” Approach Addiction, Pam Paxton, The University of Texas Austin; Allison Lang, University of Texas at Austin; Sumin Lee, University of Texas at Austin; Andrew Messamore, University of Washington
Using a Dual-Language LLM to Understand Canadian Charities, Ji Ma, The University of Texas Austin; Nathan Grasse, Carleton University; Elizabeth Searing, The University of Texas Dallas
Mapping the non-profit sector in the United Kingdom: lessons from large-scale linkage of registry data, Alasdair Rutherford, University of Stirling; Diarmuid McDonnell, University of the West of Scotland; David Clifford, University of Southampton; Fiona Couper Kenney,
University of Edinburgh; Alan Duggan, University of Stirling; Charles Rahal, University of Oxford
When business is good: business models in the nonprofit context, George Mitchell, City University of New York; Jesse Lecy, Arizona State / Urban Institute; Elizabeth Searing, The University of Texas Dallas
Chair: Elizabeth Searing, The University of Texas Dallas
Discussant: Lucia Gomez Teijeiro, University of Geneva
2131 Climate Change
Open Track
Individual
11:00 AM to 12:30 PM
Meeting Room 6
Participants:
Preparing the nonprofit sector for climate change: What predicts adaptation behavior?, Beth Gazley, Indiana University Bloomington; Rachel Cash, Indiana University Bloomington
How Local Ideology Impact Environmental Nonprofit Organizations’ Activities?, Yu Sun, Florida State University
Climate Change Advocacy? Climate Change Issue Communication of Environmental Nonprofits through Programs versus Missions., Ani Ter-Mkrtchyan, New Mexico State University
Agenda-Setting Priorities of Environmental Nonprofits in the United States: Implications for Revenues, Joycelyn Ovalle, RGK Center | The University of Texas Austin
Chair: Imoleayo Adeyeri, IU Indianapolis
2006 Collaboration in Healthcare and Community Settings
Collaboration: In, Between, and Among Sectors
Individual
11:00 AM to 12:30 PM
Meeting Room 9
Participants:
Effectiveness and challenges of peer support as a supportive relationship between patients in Japan., Miwako Hosoda, University of Tokyo, Seisa University
Activism and Resistance in Peer Service Delivery, Honey Minkowitz, University of Nebraska Omaha; Saman Afshan, North Carolina State University; Kara Lawrence, University of North Carolina Wilmington; Paige L Moore, Meredith College
The Case for Comprehensive Coalition-Buliding for Civic Health: A Wisconsin Case Study, Douglas Ihrke, University of Wisconsin Milwaukee; Mary Beth Collins, University of Wisconsin Madison Chair: Kayla Parker, University of Texas Dallas
2035 Comparative, Historical and Critical Perspectives on Incorporation, Taxation and Regulation
Public Policy, Law, Regulation, and Advocacy
Individual
11:00 AM to 12:30 PM
River Birch B
Participants:
Incorporating a Community: Civil Society, Legal Incorporation, and Place in the West, 1863-1909, Simon Shachter, University of Connecticut
Revising Charitable Deduction Rules and Eliminating the Need for the Public Charity/Private Foundation Distinction, Elizabeth Schmidt, University of Massachusetts
Exploring the Effectiveness of Tax Incentives for Social Enterprises in the U.S. and Globally, Sonali Chowdhary, George Mason University, George Mason University; Alan Abramson, George Mason University
International patterns of public and private nonprofit regulation: Implications for the United States, Mary Kay Gugerty, University of Washington; George Mitchell, City University of New York
Chair: Andrew Heiss, Georgia State University
1865 Complexity of Veteran’s Support Services: Exploring Public and Private Approaches
Governance, Leadership and Management Colloquium
11:00 AM to 12:30 PM
Meeting Room 10
Presenters:
William Brown, Texas A&M University; John Boerstler, Ipsos; Coleen Denny, Spirit of America
1933 Critical Perspectives on Nonprofit Professionals Addressing Social Oppressions through Community and Relationship Building Open Track Panel
11:00 AM to 12:30 PM
Meeting Room 5
Participants:
Addressing “Idealism Exploitation” through Unionization: Causes and Outcomes of Nonprofit Worker Labor Organizing, Rong Zhao, City University of New York; Theresa Anasti, Washington University in St. Louis; Rachel Welch, CUNY-Hunter College
The Relational Work of Conflicting Interorganizational Relationships: Social Service Providers Managing Harms of Police Collaboration, Matthew Bakko, Wayne State University
A Schematic View of Racialization: A Case of Black-led Organizations in the Deep South, Gregory Wilson, The Ohio State University
Differentiating drivers of house instability: A critical perspective, Sarah Young, Kennesaw State University; Matthew Lyons, Kennesaw State University; Jenny Owens, University of Maryland – Baltimore
Chair: Rong Zhao, City University of New York, Hunter College - CUNY
Discussant: Angela Eikenberry, University of Connecticut
2058 Diaspora Philathropy
Philanthropy, Fundraising, and Giving
Individual
11:00 AM to 12:30 PM
Meeting Room 14
Participants:
Diaspora Engagement in Philanthropy: A qualitative comparison of the post-earthquake period in Türkiye and Morocco, Malika Ouacha, Erasmus University; Selman Kesgin, Turk Kizilay
A civil society created by pain: intergenerational pain as a driver in diaspora philanthropic motives. Malika Ouacha, Erasmus University; Lucas Meijs, Rotterdam School of Management, Erasmus University
Organized Diaspora Philanthropy:Exploring the Roles of Hometown Associations, Ximeng Chen, Sacred Heart University
Navigating Diaspora Philanthropy: The Role of Identity in Mediating Homeland Giving, Satenik Papyan, Binghamton University; David Campbell, Binghamton University
Chair: Huafang Li, University of Pittsburgh
2011 Examining Nonprofit Curricula and Instruction in Higher Education Conference Theme
Individual
11:00 AM to 12:30 PM Meeting Room 8
Participants:
Serving Communities and Engaging Stakeholders through Service Learning: Pedagogical Development for Nonprofit Education, Ximeng Chen, Sacred Heart University; Huiting Qi, Valdosta State University
Back to Basics: Evaluating the Curriculum of Nonprofit Budgeting and Financial Management, Michael Lee, University of Nebraska Omaha; Monica Lea, University of Nebraska Omaha
Alumni perspectives on nonprofit studies programs: Curricula, careers, and cohorts, Erin Nelson, The University of Memphis
Using Role Play as a Teaching Tool in Nonprofit Management Courses, Samantha Plotner, University of Illinois Chicago Chair: Brenda Bushouse, University of Massachusetts
1973 Exploring Civil Society Dynamics in Sub-Saharan Africa: Democracy-building, Localization of Development and Representation
Global Civil Society, Social Movements, and Grassroots Associations Panel
11:00 AM to 12:30 PM
Meeting Room 7
Participants:
The Role of Civil Society Density in Strengthening Democracy and Political Participation in West Africa, Jude Ugwuoke, Auburn University; Bennet Kwadzo Nyadzi, Auburn University; Kelly Krawczyk, Auburn University
INGO or LNGO – does it matter and who is considered ‘local’ in aid-funded projects?, Samantha Temple, Colorado School of Mines
National and Gender representation in Executive leadership of Ghanaian NGOs, Justice Bawole, University of Ghana; Sandy Zook, University of Colorado Denver
Atrocity Prevention through Local NGOs: Case Study of District Six MuseumCape Town, South Africa, Susan Appe, State University of New York Albany; David Campbell, Binghamton University
Chair: Sandy Zook, University of Colorado Denver
Discussant: Bennet Kwadzo Nyadzi, Auburn University
2042 Governance, Leadership, and Finance Governance, Leadership and Management
Individual
11:00 AM to 12:30 PM
Meeting Room 12
Participants:
Exploring Financial Accountability in Nonprofit Organizations: Trends, Mechanisms, and Challenges, Marylin D Rozario, University of Texas Arlington; Jiwon Suh, University of Texas Arlington
Leadership Framing Legitimacy to Access Resources for the Social Impact of Nonprofit Human Service Organizations, Yu Wang, James Madison University
DEI Policies, Board Performance, and Collaboration: Drivers of Financial Conditions Among Minority-Led Muslim Nonprofits, Mohannad Mofawaz, IU Indianapolis; Afshan Paarlberg, IU Indianapolis; Shiqi Peng, The University of Hong Kong
The Role of Nonprofits in the Rulemaking Process: The Redesign of the IRS Form 990, Juniper Katz, University of Massachusetts Amherst, Todd Ely, University of Colorado Denver, and Thad Calabrese, New York University
Chair: Jeongyoon Lee, University of Kentucky
1861 Imagining the Future Nonprofit Workforce: Creative Collaboration Between Scholars and Practitioners to Equip Our Students
Conference Theme
Colloquium
11:00 AM to 12:30 PM
Meeting Room 16
Chair:
Steven Bauer, Pepperdine University
Presenters:
Ruth Bernstein, Pepperdine University; Regan Schaffer, Pepperdine University; Brian Swarts, Pepperdine University; Elizabeth Froeberg, Pan American Development Foundation
2088 Innovation, Science, and Health Innovation and Entrepreneurship
Individual
11:00 AM to 12:30 PM
Meeting Room 3
Participants:
A systematic literature review on consumers’ perceptions of social innovation, Meng-Han Ho, National Central University; Pin-Hsuan Lin, National Central University
Developing the concept of social value creation in the third sector, David Coffey, Trinity College Dublin; Sheila Cannon, Trinity College Dublin
The effects of innovation on clients’ contributions to nonprofit and for-profit organizations, Chen Ji, Louisiana State University Shreveport; Meng-Han Ho, National Central University; Patrick Dwyer, Indiana University Lilly Family School of Philanthropy
Chair: Roqaya Diyab, New York University
2081 Marginalization or Empowerment: How Well Do Civil Society Organizations Promote Social Justice and Solidarity?
Global Civil Society, Social Movements, and Grassroots Associations
Individual
11:00 AM to 12:30 PM
Meeting Room 13
Participants:
From Marginalization to Empowerment: Recognition, Solidarity, and Social Justice in the Lives of Unaccompanied Minors., Joelle Badran, University of Antwerp
Poverty politics through frontline work: Political education and working through ideas through long-term relationships, Rachel Wells, Lewis University
The Nonprofit Sector in the U.S.: A Critical Examination from 1865 - Present Day, Michael Blecher, Adelphi University; Sara Terrana, Adelphi University
Mitigating the Mistreatment of Hong Kong’s Foreign Domestic Helper, Codi Smith, University of Pennsylvania
Chair: Joannie Tremblay-Boire, University of Maryland
1884 Marketing, Mobilization, Advocacy, and Engagement Conference Theme Panel
11:00 AM to 12:30 PM
Rock Creek B
Participants:
Nonprofit Marketing Communication Tools: Effects of Messaging Strategies and Marketing Channels, Minjung Kim, Syracuse University; Peter Frumkin, University of Pennsylvania
Constructive Community-Led Journalism in Rio’s Mare Favela During COVID-19, Vanessa Guerra, University of Virginia School of Architecture; Cathy Grimes, Virginia Tech; Max Stephenson, Virginia Tech
Moral Foundations and Nonprofit Advocacy: Longitudinal Analysis of Climate Advocacy and #GreenNewDeal on Twitter/X, Viviana Wu, University of Massachusetts Amherst; Ah Ram Lee, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Audience Building Efforts among Performing Arts Institutions: Communications and Assumptions, Francie Ostrower, University of Texas Austin
Chair: Ruth Hansen, University of Wisconsin Whitewater
Discussant: Aya Okada, Tohoku University
1998 NGO Efforts to Address Environmental Challenges
Open Track
Individual
11:00 AM to 12:30 PM
Meeting Room 4
Participants:
Networks as Catalysts: Assessing Regional Partnerships for Climate Change Adaptation, Karabi Bezboruah, University of Texas Arlington; Nazmun Akter Pia, University of Texas Arlington; Luis Macias, University of Texas at Arlington; Michelle Hummel, University of Texas at Arlington
More than the usual suspects: Roles of nongovernmental organizations in local government environmental sustainability initiatives, Kristina Marty, Binghamton University; George Homsy, Binghamton University
Civil Society Organizations and Heat Governance: A Comparative Analysis of Hong Kong and Singapore, Hui Li, The University of Hong Kong; Long Ching Lo, The University of Hong Kong
Shaping Policy in the Shadows: The Impact of Environmental Nonprofits on China’s Local Policy Making, Liuqing Ren, George Mason University
Chair: Neil Boyd, Bucknell University
2001 Philanthropy and Business
Collaboration: In, Between, and Among Sectors
Individual
11:00 AM to 12:30 PM
Rock Creek A
Participants:
The Business of Philanthropy: A Systematic Review of the Literature, Niamh Carruthers, Technological University Dublin; Lorraine Sweeney, Technological University Dublin; Etain Kidney, Technological University Dublin
Is Billionaire Philanthropy changing? Comparing the Giving Rationales Across Giving Pledge Cohorts, Hans Peter Schmitz, North Carolina State University; William Piper, University of San Diego
Exploring Organizations’ Revenues and Transparency Seal: A Deep Dive Study, Marie Denis-Luque, Florida State University; Tzu-An Chiang, Florida State University; David Berlan, Florida State University
Chair: Dr. Jeannie Entenza, University of Minnesota
2052 Public Policy, Law, Regulation and Advocacy Emerging Research Public Policy, Law, Regulation, and Advocacy
Individual
11:00 AM to 12:30 PM
Meeting Room 11
Participants:
Unpacking Diversity, Representation, and Environmental Justice from the Perspectives of Environmental Advocacy Nonprofit Organizations, Jennifer Kagan, University of Hawaii Manoa; Kelly LeRoux, University of Illinois Chicago; Omowonuola Fayemiro, University of Illinois Chicago
The Interaction Effect of Revenue Diversification and Financial Stability on Advocacy Engagements in Professional Associations, Elizabeth Timothy, University of North Texas
The Economic Impact of Organizational and Public Policies on Nonprofit Employees, Jodi Benenson, University of Nebraska Omaha; Leticia (Stacey) Tetteh, University of Nebraska at Omaha; Jonathan Wong, University of Nebraska Omaha
Chair: Jennifer Alexander, University of Texas San Antonio
2030 Understanding Trust in Nonprofits and NGOs Collaboration: In, Between, and Among Sectors
Individual 11:00 AM to 12:30 PM
River Birch A
Participants:
E-leaders and how their communication style correlates to the trust within integrated inter-organizational nonprofit partnerships, Faith Ann Butcher, Eastern University
Contentious Civil Society: Trust Determinants in NGOs, Christianna Parr, University of Washington
Revisiting Trust in Nonprofit Organizations: Introducing a Multidirectional Network Approach, Bradley Stephens, Virginia Tech; Yugasha Bakshi, Virginia Tech
How do nonprofits respond to partner organizations’ trust violations in collaboration settings?, Youjung Song, State University of New York Albany
Chair: Jourdan Davis, UNC Charlotte
Assistant Professor of Philanthropic
Join Us
The Philanthropy Research Workshop series provides a platform for new and developing research on every possible aspect relating to philanthropy, and builds a sense of community and shared knowledge around the interdisciplinary elds of philanthropic and nonpro t studies.
TUES., FEBRUARY 11, 2025
Salwa Tareen
TUES., FEBRUARY 18, 2025
Kylie Kingston
TUES., FEBRUARY 25, 2025
Susan Appe
TUES., MARCH 11, 2025
Anelise Hanson Shrout
The Science of Philanthropy Initiative Conference will be held SEPTEMBER 17-18, 2025 at the University of Chicago.
This index includes all presenters and co-presenters. Each session has a session ID number as part of the Session Title and corresponds to the numbers below.
Aanestad, Kari 2075
Abdi, Leili 2059
AbouAssi, Khaldoun 1925, 2070
Abraham, Romeo 2070
Abramson, Alan 1896, 1919, 2035, 2159
Abu-Rumman, Samir 2024, 2048, 2151, 1879
Ackerman, Jacqueline 1955, 1955, 1955, 1955, 1955
Adams, Dani 2133
Adeyemo, Oluwaferanmi 2020, 2132, 2094
Adeyeri, Imoleayo 2131, 2095
Afroz, Tahmina 2095
Afshan, Saman 2006
Aggarwal, Jyoti 1922
Ahamed, Sajjad 2095
Ahmad, Fahad 1927, 1927, 1945
Ahmed, Tahmina 2095
Ahrens, Vivien 2016
Ai, Jin 1993
Ajmal, Mariam 2067
A Kumapayi, Daniel 2024
Al-Muhanna, MS, RDN, Khawlah 2004
Alade, Taslim 2021
Albrecht, Kate 1978, 2004, 1978
Alegria, Madeleine 2137
Alexander, Jennifer 2052, 2051, 2017
Alhassan, Mohammed Awal 2009, 2085
Ali, Maham 1939, 1939
Ali, Samira 2136
Allen-Handy, Ayana 1899
Allison, Emily 2066
Almog-Bar, Michal 1925, 1943
Alston, Wil 1886
Alsulami, Abdulrahman 2095
Altamimi, Hala 2032, 2089, 1995
An, Seongho 1862
Anasti, Theresa 2073, 1933, 2133
Andersson, Fredrik O 1862, 1949, 2089, 2002, 2137
Appe, Susan 1856, 1949, 1868, 1973
Aquino Alves, Mario 2079, 2085
Arsneault, Shelly 1995
Ashby, Travis 2062
This index includes all presenters and co-presenters. Each session has a session ID number as part of the Session Title and corresponds to the numbers below.
Ashdown, Brien 1966, 1966
Atkisson, Curtis 1993
Aucamp, Johanna Izabella 2056, 2066, 2085
Ayoub, Abed 1879
Azevedo, Lauren 1941, 1941
Badran, Joelle 2081
Baggetta, Matthew 2084, 2084
Bakko, Matthew 1945, 2031, 1933, 1945
Bakshi, Yugasha 2030
Balboa, Cristina 1868
Baniya, Sweta 2127
Bankston, Amanda 2013
Bar, Ronit 1943
Barker, Daniel 1919
Bar Nir, Dorit 2079
Barr, Kate 2033
Bauer, Steven 1861, 2012
Bawole, Justice 1973
Beasley, Julie 2084, 2027
Beaton, Erynn 1976, 1903
Beckhusen, Julia 2159
Bell, David 1854, 1854
Bellingham, Chris 2074
Benac, Dustin 1967
Benenson, Jodi 2101, 2052
Benjamin, Lehn 1910, 1910
Ben Porat, Anat 2046
Benson, Michelle 2095
Bergdoll, Jon 1955, 2025, 1955, 1955, 1955, 1955, 2059
Berlan, David 2008, 2016, 2001
Bernstein, Ruth 1861, 2015
Berrett, Jessica 2016, 2037, 2012
Bessa, Zerrouk 2027, 2095
Bezboruah, Karabi 2024, 1998, 1893
Bhati, Abhishek 2008
Bielefeld, Wolfgang 1862
Bies, Angela 2099
Bilimoria, Diana 2101
Blecher, Michael 2079, 2081
Boddie, Stephanie 1878, 1989, 1989
This index includes all presenters and co-presenters. Each session has a session ID number as part of the Session Title and corresponds to the numbers below.
Boerstler, John 1865
Borgan, Jamie 2095
Boris, Elizabeth 1892
Botchwey, Nisha 1878
Botos Bexten, Camtrice 1934
Boyarski, Luisa 2051, 2062, 2138
Boyd, Neil 1998, 2132
Bradshaw, Patricia 1957
Brafman, Dorit 2046
Brakman Reiser, Dana 1871, 1919, 1871, 2036
Branyon, Brittany 2009
Brass, Jennifer 2084
Bright, Dave 1871
Brinkerhoff, Jennifer 1898
Briones, Paola 2130
Broeckaert, Bert 2060
Brothers, John 1952
Brown, Eleanor 1977, 2077
Brown, William 1865, 1994, 1997
Bryan, Tara 2019, 2031
Burk, Andrew 1945
Bushouse, Brenda 2011, 1893, 1993, 2033
Butcher, Faith Ann 1993, 2014, 2030
Butler, Siani 1920
Calabrese, Thad 2042
Calderon, Apolonia 2026, 2133
Camacho Torres, Yesi 2029
Campbell, Dave 1910
Campbell, David 2058, 1973
Campbell, Katie 1999
Cannon, Sheila 2088, 2099
Cardel, PhD, MS, RD, Michelle 2004
Carman, Joanne 1949
Carpenter, Aaron 2101
Carpenter, Heather 2093, 1903
Carroll, Deborah 1978, 1978
Carruthers, Niamh 2001
Carter, Patrick 2075
Cash, Rachel 2131, 2025
Chapman, Cassandra 2008, 2008
This index includes all presenters and co-presenters. Each session has a session ID number as part of the Session Title and corresponds to the numbers below.
Chaudhry, Aysha 1936
Cheema, Jehanzeb 2101
Chen, Qiuyi 2064
Chen, Tianyu 2124, 1993
Chen, Wendy 2020
Chen, Xiaobei 2128
Chen, Ximeng 2028, 2011, 2058
Cheng, Jingyan 2040
Cheng, Yuan 2075
Cheu, Rachana 2133
Chiang, Tzu-An 2001
Child, Curtis 2062, 2077
Chipeta, Eleanor Meda 2054, 2054, 2132
Choi, Daniel 2134
Choi, Jung Ho 1901, 2003
Choi, Jung Won 2007
Choi, Su Young 2039
Chowdhary, Sonali 1919, 2035
Christensen, Robert 2063, 2070, 2067
Christiansen, Carl 1976
Clerkin, Cathleen 2095, 2014
Clerkin, Richard 1949, 2065, 2070
Clifford, David 1974
Cnaan, Ram 1877, 2134
Coffey, David 2088, 2099
Cole, Astin 2090, 2013
Coleman, Christina 2095
Collins, Annie 1958
Collins, Christopher 2029
Collins, Mary Beth 2021, 2006
Conlin, Ronald 2012
Couper Kenney, Fiona 1974
Coupet, Jason 1978, 2007
Crano, William D. 2018
Crayton, Mac-Jane 2012, 2099, 2095
Crins, Eline 2010
Crout Jones, Ryne 1952, 2061
Cuesta-Elvira, Tania 1923
Curinga, Zach 2128
Curtin, Michael 1919
Dai, Yiming 2063, 2137
Dale, Elizabeth 1900, 1924, 2061
Daniel (form. Vacekova), Gabriela 2090
This index includes all presenters and co-presenters. Each session has a session ID number as part of the Session Title and corresponds to the numbers below.
Danley, Stephen 1878, 1903
Davis, Jourdan 2030, 2053
De Bock, Tine 2036
de Bruin Cardoso, Isabel 1907, 2070, 2046, 2068
deJonge, Ari 1940
della Giovampaola, Camilla 1964
Deng, Shuyi 1934, 1969, 1934
Deng, Yunmeng 2053
Denis-Luque, Marie 2001
Denny, Coleen 1865
Denq, Wen chen 2050, 2128
De Wit, Arjen 2010
Dickerson, Kimalee 2101
Dietz, Nathan 2113
Diomande, Mantin 2095
Di Rienzo, Molly 2095
Diyab, Roqaya 2088, 2060
Djukic-Min, Dragana 1970
Dodge, Jennifer 1916, 1927
Dodge, Leah 2000
Dong, Qiang 2039
Dressel, Christina 2100, 1939
Dromgold-Sermen, Michelle 2127
D Rozario, Marylin 2042
Duggan, Alan 1970, 1974
Dula, Lauren 1921, 2026
Durnford, Jon 1955, 1955
Dwyer, Patrick 2088
Echavarria, Elizabeth 2036
Eikenberry, Angela 1882, 1903, 1921, 1933, 1957
Einolf, Christopher 2059, 2079
Elayah, Moosa 2040
Elvira-Lorilla, Teresa 2034
Ely, Todd 2042
Enrici, Ash 2077, 2086
Entenza, Dr. Jeannie 2001, 2082
Estorcien, Vernise 1920, 2031
Evans, Joshua 1854, 1854
Evans, Michelle 2015
Faseur, Tine 2036
This index includes all presenters and co-presenters. Each session has a session ID number as part of the Session Title and corresponds to the numbers below.
Faulk, Lewis 1949, 1995, 1993
Fayemiro, Omowonuola 1995, 2052
Fernandez Sawyer, Kandyce 2017
Fernsler, Terry 2100
Ferreira, Albert 2127
Ferris, Anna 2134
Finster, Virginia 2024
Flanigan, Shawn 1889, 2009
Flannery, Helen 2025, 2025
Flores, Luis 2088
Fogle, Alexzandra 2113
Ford, Michael 1923
Ford, Sara 2032
Frank, Peter 1966
Freiwirth, Judy 1957
Froeberg, Elizabeth 1861
Frumkin, Peter 1884
Frye, Brandon 1935
Fulton, Brad 1952, 2084, 2075
Fyall, Rachel 2074, 2017
Gallagher, Anita 2059
Gallagher, B. Kathleen 1893, 1893, 2024
Gamboa, Glenn 1965
Gammel, Analise 1899
Garcia, Anthony 2029
Garcia-Rodriguez, Inigo 2034, 1923
Garner, PhD, RD, Jennifer 2004
Garrity, MS, RD, Kate 2004
Gatlin, Anna Ruth 2089
Gazley, Beth 1866, 2131, 2007, 2051
Geers, Ivo 2156
Ghaffari, Nazanin 1893
Gibbs, Ben 2077
Gillespie, Elizabeth 1921
Gomez Teijeiro, Lucia 1974, 2041, 2094, 1936
Goodman, Julie 2095
Goodman, Payton A. 1921, 2012
Gouge, Melissa 1899
Grasse, Nathan 1870, 1923, 2041, 1978, 1974, 2014
Green, Zeta 2017
This index includes all presenters and co-presenters. Each session has a session ID number as part of the Session Title and corresponds to the numbers below.
Greenfield, Charisma 2066
Griffith, Eric 1893, 2033
Grimes, Cathy 1884
Grossman, Kathryn 2013
Guan, Shanshan 2039
Guerra, Vanessa 1884
Gugerty, Mary Kay 1910, 1868, 2035
Nihat Gümüş 2064
Guo, Chao 1957, 2007, 2095, 1993
Guo, Wen 2033
Gupta, Sumedha 2062
H. Toosi, Massumeh 2073
Habib, Salman Bin 1970
Hager, Mark 2040, 2082, 2003
Hahm, Courtney 2051
Hains, Bryan 1966
Hains, Kristina 1966
Hall, Kelly 2036
Han, Chanyoung 2095
Han, Xiao 2062
Hand, Laura 2020
Handy, Femida 2048, 2003, 2018, 1921, 2134
Hansen, Ruth 1882, 1884, 2026
Harrison, Teresa 1870, 2077, 2077
Headings, PhD, RD, LD, Amy 2004
Heiss, Andrew 2035, 2124, 2018
Heist, Dan 2061, 2025
Hemachandra, Maya 2061
Henrekson, Ebba 2137
Herrold, Catherine 1898, 1925, 2108
Hersey, Leigh 1893, 2024
Hitoshi Mayer, Lloyd 1892, 1871
Ho, Meng-Han 2088, 2088
Hoang, Thanh Minnie 1988, 2090
Hodge, David 1878
Hoedemakers, Juri 2068
Hoff, Claire 1976
Homsy, George 1998
Hong, Minji 2041
Hornsey, Matthew 2008
This index includes all presenters and co-presenters. Each session has a session ID number as part of the Session Title and corresponds to the numbers below.
Hosoda, Miwako 2006
Hossain, Jonayed 1915, 1938
Howard, Lia 1878
Hua, Peixin 2004
Huang, Sherry 1964
Hummel, Michelle 1998
Hung, ChiaKo 2003, 2012, 1934, 2019
Hungerman, Daniel 1977
Hunter, Jordan 2084
Hussein, Amml 1924
Hvenmark, Johan 2055
Hwang, Hyunseok 1913
Hyde, Mary 1895, 2159
Iannelli, Sydney 2095
Ihrke, Douglas 2006
Iizuka, Akiko 2045, 2095
Imperial, Mark 2065
Irizarry, Jose 1924, 2015
Ishida, Yu 2068
Jang, Hee Soun 2036, 2032, 2071, 2074
Jangjoo, Sina 2127, 2016, 1941
Jarvis, Kirsi 2019
Jeon, Junoh 2070
Jeong, Bok Gyo 1856, 1937, 1854, 1862, 2089, 1937
Jeong, Jihoon 2032
Ji, Chen 2089, 2088, 2002, 2093
Jo, Suyeon 2053
Jock, Janet 2078, 2084
Jones-Layman, Amanda 2013
Jung, Seoeun 2128
Jung, Tobias 2010
Jung, Yuha 1893
Kachab, Maya 2127
Kagan, Jennifer 2052
Kail, Matt 2014
Kamwibua, Diana 2018, 2045
Katz, Juniper 2042
Kay, Tamara 2055
Keeney, Kate 1893, 1893
Kendra, James 2048
Kerlin, Janelle 1862, 2036
Kesgin, Selman 2000, 1879, 2058
This index includes all presenters and co-presenters. Each session has a session ID number as part of the Session Title and corresponds to the numbers below.
Keshecki, Tamara 1893
Khan, Abdul 2088
Khan, Arishaa 1915
Khan, Jessica 2067
Khan, Samir 1958, 1972
Khurana, Shaun 2029, 2094
Kidney, Etain 2001
Kijewski, Lindsay 2096
Kilama, Dennis 1926, 2037, 2028
Kim, Hanvit 2032
Kim, Hyojun 2071
Kim, Jintak 2071, 2076
Kim, Jiseul 2041
Kim, Minjung 2003, 2070, 1884, 1993
Kim, Mirae 1949, 1870, 1995
Kim, Saerim 2032
Kim, Seon Mi 2089
Kim, Sung-Ju 1856, 1937
Kim, Yeha 2004
Kim, Yunjun 2070, 2041
King, Bridgett 2136
King, Daniel 2026, 2124, 1903
King, David 1926, 1967, 1967
King Bhetaria, Sarah 1955
Kleinfelter, Janet 1892
Kohen, Elnaz 1938
Kommeh, Anthoanette 2065, 2069
Koolen-Maas, Stephanie 1943
Kotleba, Anne 2095
Kou, Xiaonan 2059, 2028
Kraeger, Patsy 1966, 1966
Krause, Timothy W. 2018
Krawczyk, Kelly 1973
Krawczyk, Kelly Ann 2069, 2136
Krlev, Gorgi 2019
Krzyzanowski Guerra, Kathleen 2004
Kuan, Jennifer 1870
Kuenzi, Kerry 2066
Kushner, Roland 2039, 2054
Kwadzo Nyadzi, Bennet 1973, 1973
Lal, Yashaswi 2004
Lam, Marcus 2095, 1923, 2041
This index includes all presenters and co-presenters. Each session has a session ID number as part of the Session Title and corresponds to the numbers below.
Lamothe, Meeyoung 1995
Landi, Stefano 2039
Landuyt, Noel 1999
Lang, Allison 1974
Langer, Dr. Julie 1882
Lassu, Reka Anna 2066
Lavastida, Vicki 2048
Lawoyin, Bunmi 2067
Lawrence, Kara 2009, 2006
Layton, Michael 1913
Lea, Monica 2011, 2031
Leardini, Chiara 2039
Lecy, Jesse 1974, 1981, 1974, 2014
Lee, Ah Ram 1884
Lee, Cheon 2084
Lee, Chong Kyoon 1994
Lee, Hongseok 2003
Lee, Jeongyoon 2042, 2070, 2041
Lee, Jin Young 1994
Lee, Jongmin 2132, 1934, 2133
Lee, Kitae 2070
Lee, Kyungmin 2050
Lee, Michael 2037, 2011
Lee, Soojung 2124
Lee, Sumin 1974
Lee, Young-Joo 1921, 1967
Lee, PhD, Alexandra 2004
Leonhardt, Victoria 1972
LePere-Schloop, Megan 1901, 1935, 1936, 1939, 1913, 1935, 1936, 1939, 1939
LeRoux, Kelly 1877, 1882, 2082, 2052
Levine Daniel, Jamie 1939
Li, Bo 2003
Li, Huafang 2058, 2133, 2034
Li, Hui 2051, 1998, 2071
Li, Peiyao 2045
Li, Tianyi 1922, 2034, 2014
Liebert, Saltanat 2031
Lim, Grace 2159
Lin, Pin-Hsuan 2088
Liu, Helen 1909, 1862
This index includes all presenters and co-presenters. Each session has a session ID number as part of the Session Title and corresponds to the numbers below.
Liu, Kailin 2093
Liu, Qiaozhen 2089, 1995
Liu, Ying 2082, 1921
Lo, Carlos Wing-Hung 2071
Lo, Long Ching 1998
Lopez-Rodriguez, Luz Mairym 2059
Lott, Cindy 1892
Love, Kenya 2054
Lu, Jiahuan 2039, 2082
Lu, Yang 2094
Lunga, Wilfred 2053
Lyons, Matthew 1933
Ma, Ji 2037, 2019, 1974
Ma, Yinglin 2092, 2046, 2069
Macias, Luis 1998
MacIndoe, Heather 1913, 1995
Maes, Sarah 2060, 2060
Mahat Shamir, Michal 2079
Mahoney, Julia 1886
Maleki Najafabadi, Elham 2127
Mallinson, Daniel 1941
Mandiberg, James 2032
Mangwiro, Neville 2053, 2090
Mao, Hanjin 1856, 2127, 2082
Mao, Wenye 2064
Már Ársælsson, Kristinn 1895
Marichal, Jose 2050
Marrese, Tiana 1921, 1981, 2048, 1921, 2134
Mars, Matthew 1966
Martin, Hannah 1892
Marty, Kristina 1998
Marwell, Nicole 1910
Mason, Dyana 1900, 2074, 2100
Mathews, Melissa 2067
Mathieson, Callie 2095
Mathys, Elien 2092
Mati, Jacob 2069, 2056, 2056, 2132
Matsunaga, Yoshiho 2018
Maxmeister, Marc 1958
Maxwell, Shawn 1988, 2085, 2099
Mayo, Jennifer 1870
This index includes all presenters and co-presenters. Each session has a session ID number as part of the Session Title and corresponds to the numbers below.
McAngus, Raine 2095
McDonnell, Diarmuid 1970, 1974
McDougle, Lindsey 1900, 1949
McFarland, CAWA, CVA, Betsy 1999
McGilvery, Karen 1927
McGuire, Susan 2101
McKean, Anna 2019
McMullin, Caitlin 2045, 2031
Meagher, Trevor 2024
Meier, Dominik 1970, 2065, 1936
Meijeren, Maikel 2134
Meijs, Lucas 1907, 1943, 2156, 2021, 2058, 2062, 1943, 2068, 1993
Mercado, Julie M. 1922
Merrick, Weston 2075
Messamore, Andrew 1974
Metayer, Nesly 1957
Meyer, Seth 2130, 2015, 1921, 2128
Miles, Joshua-Paul 2073
Min, Byung 1862, 1862
Ming, Yue 1921, 1921, 1939
Minkowitz, Honey 2050, 2086, 2006
Minor, Alyssa 2061
Miori, Holly 1922
Mirabella, Roseanne 1903, 1934, 1949, 1969, 1916, 1927, 1903
Mishiro, Yuko 2068
Mitchell, Eric 2108
Mitchell, George 2084, 2012, 2035, 1974
Mittendorf, Brian 1866, 2025, 2025
Mofawaz, Mohannad 2060, 2042
Mogotsi, Keratiloe 2010
Moldavanova, Alisa 1889, 2033
Monroe-White, Thema 1901, 1939, 1935, 2014
Moody, Michael 1913, 2012
Moore, Paige L 2006
Mosley, Jennifer 1877, 1910
Moyo, Bhekinkosi 1883, 2069, 2054, 2054
Mumford, Steve 2136
Murphy, Amanda 2112
Murray, Bethany 1945
Musickant, Gabriela 2133
Myeong, Ji Yong 2050
This index includes all presenters and co-presenters. Each session has a session ID number as part of the Session Title and corresponds to the numbers below.
Naylor, Lorenda 1854
Ndlovu, Hlengiwe 2056
Neely, Daniel 2095
Nelson, Erin 2011
Neri-Castracane, Giulia 1871
Nesbit, Rebecca 1895, 2046, 2000
Never, Brent 2128, 2063
Nishide, Yuko 2064
Noor, Zeeshan 2101
Norcross, James 1923
Norton, Sam 2062
Nowell, Branda 2132
Ntigbu, Isabella 1920
Nunez, Juan 2029
Nwakpuda, Emily 1893, 1922
Nyarko-Debrah, Nathaniel 2095
O'Dell, Ben 1989
O'Steen, Haley 2066
Oeding, Noemi 1997, 2015
Ogawa, Akinobu 1909, 2082
Oh, Jeeson 1913
Okada, Aya 1884, 2068, 1937
Okaomee, Anastesia 2028, 2028
Olivares, Alexandra 2095
Onishi, Tamaki 1856, 1889, 1946, 1862
Oricha, Prince 2090, 2063, 2013
Osei, Dennis Boahene 2054, 2054, 2132
Osili, Una 1866, 1977, 2062, 1955, 1955, 2059
Ostrower, Francie 1884
Ottoni-Wilhelm, Mark 1977
Ouacha, Malika 2003, 2010, 2058, 2058
Ouma, Wycliffe Nduga 2089, 2054, 2054, 2132
Ovalle, Joycelyn 2131
Owens, Jenny 1933
Oxley, Jonathan 2055, 1922
Paarlberg, Afshan 2031, 2042
Paarlberg, Laurie 1913, 2000, 1913, 1939
Padot, Rebecca 1878, 1989
Panhwar, Sabah 2027
Papanek, Alicia 2128
Papyan, Satenik 2058
Parijat, Nabila 2093
This index includes all presenters and co-presenters. Each session has a session ID number as part of the Session Title and corresponds to the numbers below.
Park, Kristy 2004
Park, Shinyoung 2064
Park, Young Joo 2041
Parker, Kayla 2006, 2066
Parr, Christianna 2030, 2086
Parsons, MSPH, Jennifer 2004
Paxton, Enoch 2061, 2067
Paxton, Pam 1895, 1970, 1974
Peng, Shiqi 2055, 2037, 2042
Pham, Hien 2014
Phayal, Anup 2065
Philips, Jack Brandon 1916, 1969, 1916
Phillips, Rhonda 1966, 1966
Phillips, Susan 2010
Pia, Nazmun Akter 1998
Piatak, Jaclyn 1877, 1889, 2132, 2095
Pineda, Andrea 2085
Pinheiro, Flavio 2018
Piper, William 2001
Pitcho, Shani 2079
Piubello Orsini, Luca 2039
Plerhoples, Alicia 1919
Plotner, Samantha 2011, 2017
Polda, Anastasia 2075
Pontes, Megan 2007, 2027, 1967
Poongundranar, Thiya 1981
Pope, Falen 1926, 2095, 1926
Popkowski Leszczyc, Peter 2008
Post, Margaret 1892, 1916
Powell, Katrina 2127
Prentice, Christopher 1949, 2065
Prentice, Valencia 2099
Pritchard, MPH, Hadley 2004
Qi, Huiting 2011
Qu, Ellie Heng 2034, 1939
Quispe, Dr. Merlene Patrice 1920, 2096, 1920
Raeymaeckers, Peter 1900, 2078, 2092, 2060
Rafi, Ahmed 2078
Raggo, Paloma 2127, 2095
Rahal, Charles 1974
Ralph, Allison 2075
Ramanath, Ramya 2068
This index includes all presenters and co-presenters. Each session has a session ID number as part of the Session Title and corresponds to the numbers below.
Ramsay, Oatile 2085
Rana, Prerna 2079
RedWing, Carol 1927
Rehnborg, Sarah Jane 1999
Reina-Soto, Esteban 2095
Ren, Liuqing 1998
Ressler, Robert 1936, 2094
Reynolds, Amy 1940
Rice, Paige 2012
Richie, Ivy 1989
Rios, Juan 1924
Rissler, Grant 2031, 2127
Rizvi, Mona 2127
Robichau, Dr. Robbie 1882, 1976, 2017
Robinson, Emily 2067
Robles, Andrea 1899, 2113
Rojas, PhD, Cynthia W. 1995, 2071
Romero-Merino, M. Elena 2034, 1923
Ronquillo, John 2101, 1994
Rosenbaum, Woodrow 1896
Rossi, Gina 2039
Ruddle, Travis 2067
Ruelas, Ignacio 2037
Ruiz, Stefanie 1907, 2000
Russell, Allison 1907, 2070
Rutherford, Alasdair 1970, 1974
Rutt, Kelly 1966
Saifer, Adam 1927, 1945
Saitgalina, Marina 1994
Saltzman, Amy 1965
Samad, Abdul 1915, 2075, 2084, 1926
Sanchez, Eliana 2040
Sandberg, Billie 2020, 1976
Santamaria-Mariscal, Marcos 2034
Sato, Grace 2095
Savino, Ryan 2032
Saxton, Gregory 2095
Schaffer, Regan 1861, 2029
Schendel, Hannah 2066
Schlachter, Laura 1895, 2063
Schmidt, Elizabeth 2035
Schmitz, Hans Peter 1952, 1868, 2084, 2001
This index includes all presenters and co-presenters. Each session has a session ID number as part of the Session Title and corresponds to the numbers below.
Schrooten, Mieke 2060
Schuman Ottinger, Cinthia 2108
Schwartz Greco, Emily 1965
Schwoerer, Kayla 2020
Scott, Layla 2127
Searing, Donald 1964, 1936
Searing, Elizabeth 1922, 1923, 1970, 1974, 1870, 1922, 1923, 1936, 1936, 1970, 1976, 1978, 1974, 1974
Segatto, Catarina 2085
Segnestam Larsson, Ola 2055
Selzer, Veronica 2012
Seo, Danbi 1889, 2007
Sergi, Atalaya 1899
Sethi, Divya 2062
Shachter, Simon 2035, 1993
Shafau, Ibrahim 1903
Shaker, Genevieve 1889, 2064, 2061
Sheik Abdullah, Iman Fathima 1938, 1926, 1945, 2095
Shi, Wanzhu 1941
Shieh, Evan 1935
Shields, Morgan 2133
Shockley, Gordon 1966
Shumate, Michelle 1877, 2004
Siddiqui, Shariq 1879
Sidel, Mark 1856, 1883, 1898, 1937, 1871, 1937
Silvia, Filipi Nascimento 1993
Sinha, Jill 1878, 2136
Sithole, Tererai 2134, 2009
Smith, Codi 1913, 2081, 1997
Smith, Emily 2076, 2090
Snell Herzog, Patricia 2031
Song, Youjung 2030
Soskis, Benjamin 1896, 1952, 1965
Sowa, Jessica 2048
Spence, Jessica 2008
Spicer, Jason 2055
Srem-Sai, Royal 2133
Steinberg, Richard 2077, 1993, 2077
Stephens, Bradley 2030
Stephenson, Max 1884
Stewart, Amanda J. 1952, 2066
Stover, Alissa 2014
This index includes all presenters and co-presenters. Each session has a session ID number as part of the Session Title and corresponds to the numbers below.
Strohl, Katyayani 2136
Stuart, Brooke 2066
Suarez, David 1979
Sugimoto, Cassidy 1935
Suh, Jiwon 2024, 2042, 2041
Sullivan, Andrew 2032
Sullivan, Russell 1919
Sumsion, Rachel 2061, 2025
Sun, Qingqing 2040
Sun, Yue 2001
Supiyan, Yusri 1879
Suva, Barnabas 2002, 2013, 2095
Suykens, Ben 2012
Swarts, Brian 1861
Sweeney, Lorraine 2001
Syed, Ahmed Muzakkir 1938
Taggart, Gabel 1967
Talan, David 2159
Taleporos, Kathryn 2020
Talmage, Craig 1966, 1966, 1966, 1966
Tang, Shui Yan 2071
Tang, Sisi 2076
Tas, Sercan 1970
Taylor, Caitlin 1920
Taylor, Kenneth 1957
Taylor, Liza 2077
Temple, Samantha 1973
Ter-Mkrtchyan, Ani 2131
Terrana, Sara 2130, 2081
Tetteh, Leticia (Stacey) 1916, 2101, 2052
Thapa, Sitashma 1915, 1938
Thomas, Nisa 1936
Thornton, Jeremy 1870, 1870
Thottam, Aakash 2008
Timothy, Elizabeth 2052
Tirivanhu, Precious 2053
Toepler, Stefan 1909, 1946
Toyama-Szeto, Nikki 1940
Tran, Long 1935
Traylor, Tene 2096
Tremblay-Boire, Joannie 2081, 2137, 2055, 2017
Tsai, Chin-Chang 2004, 2124
This index includes all presenters and co-presenters. Each session has a session ID number as part of the Session Title and corresponds to the numbers below.
Tschirhart, Mary
2046, 2069
Ugazio, Giuseppe 1964, 1936
Ugwuoke, Jude 2090, 2013, 1973
Um, Hyungsik 2089
Upoma, Shahrin 2069
Upton, Geoffrey 1927
Ur Rehman, Inzimam 2064
Vakharia, Neville 2002
Valero, Jesus N 1994, 2027, 2074
Vance, Andy 2060, 2061
Vance-McMullen, Danielle 2025
Van Dam, Sylvie 2060
Van Dijke, Marius 2062
van Ipenburg-Hendriks, Puck 2019
VanLandingham, Gary 2016
van Overbeeke, Philine 1943, 2046, 1993
Vassel, Faye-Marie 1935
Vélez Young, Morghan 2070
Vergueiro, Joao Paulo 1972, 2059
Vien, Ha 2090, 2040
von Schnurbein, Georg 1943, 1936, 2002, 1943
Vos, Hannah 2059
Vrana, Victoria 1896
Wales, Jane 1896
Walk, Marlene 2066, 1939
Walker, Vernetta 1957
Walworth, Benjamin 2095
Wang, Qiaochu 2033, 2015
Wang, Qun 1946
Wang, Xiaoyun 1997
Wang, Yu 2042, 2095
Warsi, Danish 2050
Washington, Roshawnda 1920
Wasif, Rafeel 1879, 2008, 2020
Watson, Kate 2029
Webb, Margaret 2127
Weber, Peter 2089, 2069, 2136
Welch, Rachel 1933
Wells, Rachel 2081
Wentworth, Kara 2096, 2133
This index includes all presenters and co-presenters. Each session has a session ID number as part of the Session Title and corresponds to the numbers below.
Wheeler, Joe 2074
Wiepking, Pamala 2026, 2008, 2010
Wightman, Breck 2067
Wiley, Kimberly 1969, 1976, 1927, 1976, 2128
Willems, Jurgen 2137, 1993
Williams, Ian 2095
Williams, Jeff 2017, 2025
Williams, Teshanee 2101
Willner, Lauren 1927, 1976, 2066
Wilson, Catherine 1878
Wilson, Gregory 1934, 1933, 1939
Wilson, Melissa 2010
Wimpee, Rachel 1883
Witesman, Eva 2019, 2077
Witkowski, Gregory 1979
Wong, Jonathan 2101, 2052
Word, Jessica 2071, 2041, 2048
Wozniak, Sara 2016
Wright-Smith, Hara 1878
Wu, Viviana 1901, 1884, 1913
Xie, Ming 1921
Xu, Chengxin 2075
Xu, Huitan 2010
Xu, Lin 2051
Xu, Xiaoyang 2073
Yamamoto, Mio 2068
Yamashita, Takashi 2159
Yamauchi, Naoto 1909, 2082
Yang, Jeongyoon 2036, 2007
Yao, Yingzhou 2040
Ye, Meng 2018, 2039
Yeo, Jungwon 2004, 2086
Yoo, Eunsil 2086
Yoon, Nara 2003, 1994
Yoruk, Baris 1977
Yoshioka, Takayuki 1909, 2092
You, Wenpei 2075, 1913
Young, Sarah 1927, 1933, 1976
Yuan, May 2113
This index includes all presenters and co-presenters. Each session has a session ID number as part of the Session Title and corresponds to the numbers below.
Yun, Jung Ah (Claire) 1941
Yun, Sun-Jin 2050
Yuqin, Zhou 2095
Zarnegar Deloffre, Maryam 1868, 1898, 1868
Zhang, Chenxin 2037
Zhang, Ruodan 2130
Zhang, Shuwen 2004
Zhao, Rong 1933, 1933
Zhong, Yinman 2093, 2073, 2095
Zook, Sandy 1973, 1935, 1973
Zorrilla, Daniel 2009
Zuhlke, Samantha 2026, 2078
The journal of philanthropy and civil society from the perspective of the humanities and normative theory philanthropia.lcc.lt
Published by the Institute for Philanthropy LCC International University, Klaipėda, Lithuania
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Cambridge Elements are original, concise, authoritative, and peer-reviewed collections of scholarly and scientific research. Organised into focused series edited by leading scholars, they provide comprehensive coverage of key topics in disciplines spanning the arts and sciences.
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• Assoc. Prof. Claire Dunning was promoted and tenured. She published two new articles in Nonprofit Quarterly and Stanford Social Innovation Review. She is the winner of the ARNOVA 2023 “Outstanding Book Award” and 2024 “Outstanding Article in NVSQ Award.”
• Assoc. Research Prof. Nathan Dietz published new research from the Do Good Institute and Generosity Commission revealing that group membership significantly impacts volunteering and giving, and that volunteering increases charitable behavior toward neighbors.
• Assoc. Clinical Prof. Ebonie Johnson Cooper leads the expansion of nonprofit executive education and serves as the academic director of the graduate certificate in Nonprofit Management and Leadership.
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