Funder Convening: Vaccine Equity, Trusted Messengers & Civic Infrastructure

Funder Convening: Vaccine Equity, Trusted Messengers & Civic Infrastructure

Join us on Friday, April 9 to learn more about promising initiatives on vaccine outreach, and ways to map out a collective equity strategy

By Center for Social Innovation, UC Riverside

Date and time

Starts on Friday, April 9, 2021 · 9am PDT

Location

Online

About this event

COVID-19 has shown the urgent need for community partnerships and civic infrastructure, in order to ensure vaccine equity and stronger democratic foundations for healthy communities.

Join us on Friday, April 9 for a national strategy convening, on ways that we can collectively build better civic infrastructure—involving government agencies, community organizations, community media, and philanthropy.

This event is hosted by United Philanthropy Forum, in collaboration with Grantmakers In Health, Funders’ Committee for Civic Participation, Media Impact Funders, and the Census Legacies Project led by Center for Social Innovation at UC Riverside.

In preparation for the strategy convening, please fill out this brief survey about any vaccine outreach efforts you are aware of. You will also have the opportunity to nominate the initiative for recognition at our national strategy convening. https://forms.gle/t115e36zXZTdejWy7

More information about the April 9 funder convening

The economic, health, and social destruction wrought by the pandemic has been considerable, with over half a million U.S. deaths and millions more facing detrimental health consequences. Many parts of the country are also struggling to mitigate steep disparities by race, immigrant status, disability, and more. These challenges underscore the need for even greater investments in government systems, public media, and civic infrastructure.

How can we use this opportunity to build a better civic infrastructure that can meet our modern-day needs for effective and equitable rapid response?

Organized by

The Center for Social Innovation—which is the result of two years of planning, community engagement, and foundation dialogue—aims to provide a credible research voice that spurs civic leadership and policy innovation. We also aim to integrate researchers, community organizations, and civic stakeholders in collaborative projects and long-term partnerships that boost collective impact. Importantly, the Center seeks to shift away from a “problem” narrative to an “opportunity” narrative for marginalized communities and localities.

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