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HUD’s
Office
for
International
and
Philanthropic
Innovation
(IPI),
in
partnership
with
the
Council
on
Foundations,
congratulates
the
ten
winners
of
this
year’s
Secretary’s
Awards
for
Public-Philanthropic
Partnerships.
Visit
our
website
to
learn
more
about
these
exceptional
partnerships
between
philanthropy
and
government.
Watch
here
for
Secretary
Carson’s
congratulatory
address
to
the
winning
foundations
and
his
message
to
the
philanthropic
community
in
support
of
government
and
philanthropy
working
together.
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International
and
Philanthropic
Innovation
WINNERS
OF 2017
SECRETARY’S
AWARDS
| Awards were given
to place-based
funders for
completed or ongoing
projects that are
executed in
partnership with a
local, regional, or
federal government
agency. The winners
are:
The
Anne
and
Henry
Zarrow
Foundation,
Alleviating
and
Preventing
Homelessness/Building
Tulsa,
Building
Lives
Bill
and
Melinda
Gates
Foundation,
Public
Housing
Authority-School
District
Partnerships
Initiative
Capital
One
Foundation,
Y-PLAN
(Youth -
Plan,
Learn,
Act,
Now)
Community
Foundation
of
the
Lowcountry,
Project
SAFE
(Sewer
Access
for
Everyone)
The
JP
Morgan
Chase
Foundation,
PRO
Neighborhoods:
ReFresh
Initiative
The
Kresge
Foundation,
Detroit
Home
Mortgage
Mayor’s
Fund
for
Los
Angeles,
Summer
Night
Lights
(SNL)
The
New
Hampshire
Charitable
Foundation,
Collective
Action,
Collective
Impact
Nusenda
Foundation,
Albuquerque
Living
Cities
Integration
Initiative
The
Skillman
Foundation,
Grow
Detroit's
Young
Talent
(GDYT)
RESEARCH
ON AGING
WITH
JAPAN
| The
governments of
Japan and the
United States
understand the
importance of
housing for
older adults.
For this reason,
Japan’s
Ministry of
Land,
Infrastructure,
Transport, and
Tourism (MLIT);
HUD; and Ginnie
Mae, a
government-owned
corporation
within HUD, are
leading a joint
research
partnership on
aging in place.
CALL
FOR
CITYSCAPE
SUBMISSIONS
|
The goal of
Foreign
Exchange, the
international
section of
HUD’s
Cityscape
journal, is to
deliver
high-quality
research on
housing and
community
development
issues abroad
that could
deliver value to
communities here
in the United
States. By
linking
international
innovations and
promising
practices to
similar
conditions and
contexts here in
the States,
research can
further the
conversation on
applying
creative
solutions to
communities’
most pressing
challenges.
HUD’s Office
for International
and Philanthropic
Innovation invites
submissions to the
journal. Submission
of a short
(2–3
paragraph) treatment
of your proposed
article is
requested. For those
whose treatments are
accepted, final
article submissions
are due in July for
the upcoming issue.
Please send
submissions to ipiinfo@huduser.gov.
Recent articles in
Cityscape with an
international focus
include:
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