May 2016
An Equitable Food System: Good for Families, Communities, and the Economy
Overview
This issue brief describes the benefits of building an equitable food system for families, communities, and the economy.
Find other equity briefs here.
May 2016
Just and Fair Employment for All: Good for Families, Communities, and the Economy
Overview
This issue brief describes how connecting people to just and fair work benefits families, communities, and the economy.
Find other equity briefs here.
May 2016
High-Quality Education for All: Good for Families, Communities, and the Economy
Overview
This issue brief describes how creating an equitable pre-K through 12 educational system can benefit families, communities, and the economy.
Find other equity briefs here.
December 2015
High-Quality, Affordable Childcare for All: Good for Families, Communities, and the Economy
Overview
This issue brief describes how increasing access to high-quality and affordable childcare benefits families, communities, and the economy.
Find other equity briefs here.
Equity: The Soul of Collective Impact
Overview
To achieve population-level change, practitioners must learn from earlier community-building models. Achieving results requires dismantling systems in which public policies, institutional practices, cultural representations, and other norms reinforce and perpetuate racial inequity. This paper examines the collective impact model by drawing on lessons learned from collaborative, community-based efforts such as the Healthy Start program in Oakland, California, the national Promise Neighborhoods program, and the Alliance for Boys and Men of Color.
August 2015
Full Employment for All: The Social and Economic Benefits of Race and Gender Equity in Employment
Overview
How much stronger could the economy be if everyone who wanted a job could find one—regardless of race, ethnicity, or gender? This analysis, produced for the Fed Up campaign for Federal Reserve policies that work for communities most left behind by the recovery, estimates the potential economic gains of full employment for all. Find out what the United States economy—and the economies of the 12 metropolitan regions where each Federal Reserve office is located—could look like with true full employment for all.
Media: This is how protesters plan to take on the Federal Reserve (Wonkblog)
July 2015
Building Financially Secure Futures: An Approach for Boys and Men of Color
April 2015
An Equity Profile of the San Francisco Bay Area Region
Overview
The Bay Area is booming, but a rising tide economy is not lifting up its low-income communities and communities of color. As communities of color continue to drive growth and change in the region, addressing wide racial inequities and ensuring people of color can fully participate as workers, entrepreneurs, and innovators is an urgent priority. Our analysis finds that the regional economy could have been $117 billion stronger in 2012 had its racial gaps in income and employment. This profile, produced for The San Francisco Foundation, describes the region’s demographic transformation and performance on a series of equity indicators. Download summary here.