Latinos and Retirement: 6 Things Dallas Taught Me

Latinos and Retirement: 6 Things Dallas Taught Me

By Maria F. Mata. This post originally appeared on Medium.com. Last summer, a group of colleagues and I went to Dallas to coordinate a series of activities for Latino older adults that included an open forum with seniors, local leaders, and representatives from...
Latinos and Retirement: 6 Things Dallas Taught Me

Engaging Volunteers in Grassroots Awareness Building

by Tim Johnston, Assistant Director of Social Enterprise and Training, and Sherrill Wayland, Manager of National Projects, at SAGE. Sometimes it feels like every time we turn around, somebody is talking about working at the grassroots level. From grassroots education...
Maria’s Story

Maria’s Story

Educating the World on HIV/AIDS Prevention by Maria Glover Wallace, MS, MBA This Women’s History Month, I reflect on the service given by LGBT women during the height of the AIDS epidemic in the 1980s to the countless victims who suffered alone and in silence...
Latinos and Retirement: 6 Things Dallas Taught Me

National Women and Girls HIV/AIDS Awareness Day

This post, in honor of National Women and Girls HIV/AIDS Awareness Day (March 10th) comes from Maria Eugenia Lane of NHCOA. Women and girls are often an overlooked population in the fight against HIV/AIDS. Yet, about one-quarter of Americans living with HIV are women...
Latinos and Retirement: 6 Things Dallas Taught Me

Two Spirit: The Story of a Movement Unfolds

Two spirit — the movement, the societies and the term itself — marks a return to Native American traditions that historically recognized more than two genders. By Zachary Pullin (Chippewa Cree) This article originally appeared in Native People’s Magazine and Kosmos...