The Power To Dismantle The Stigma Surrounding Youth Homelessness

By AJ Jefferson

The Homeless Children’s Education Fund advances the education of youth experiencing homelessness in Southwestern Pennsylvania, guiding them to
be productive, empowered citizens.

The reality is the track to homelessness is cyclical and usually starts before someone is born.
The good news is there are hundreds of ways people can interrupt these cycles to create better opportunities for those trapped. Ensuring parents and students access high-quality education is one of the most critical interventions, as it opens the door to self-sufficient employment and other social opportunities.

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The Power To Support Women to Transform their Lives

By Carmen Correa

In a region where odds are overwhelmingly stacked against women, Pro Mujer helps them overcome any doubts they may have about their ability to transform their lives. In 2022, we provided healthcare services and skilling opportunities to more than 200,000 women.

Yet as importantly, we are bringing them into the financial system, helping them gain access to the funding they need to prosper. That is possibly the most powerful tool to fight poverty.

And that’s exactly what we are doing.

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The Power To Impact Sustainable Change in Fashion

By Kiran Jade

I am the Founder and CEO of Wolven. We create sustainable activewear and swimwear and are committed to challenging the status quo of boring, generic clothing and the harmful impacts of the fast fashion industry. Our mission is to empower Gen Z and Millennials to make healthier choices for themselves and the world around them.

Growing up with Hindu and Muslim parents, inclusivity and South Asian culture have always been a deep part of my life. I spent my summers traveling to Pakistan, and fell in love with Eastern patterns, textiles, and sewing my own clothing. I founded Wolven as a space to bring together what I love most: self-expression, celebrating differences, and protecting the environment.

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The Power To Change Your Story And Let Go Of Your "Darlings"

By Solunis Nicole Bay

Stories are valuable. They’re vehicles for our values, hopes and dreams. The power to change a story takes reflection, grit, boundaries and a strategy.

Stories are at the core of our beliefs and visions. We also use stories to build teams and enroll others in larger, collective goals.

My story has changed at least twice; I’ve lived three lives. Each time I was on the verge of change, one thing became clear: forced actions were unnecessary. Amid changing my narrative and that of my clients, surrendering to change and strategy were the best allies.

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The Power To Literally Take the Leap

By Sara Curtis

I'm a professional skydiver. You may not have known that was a thing. I have a passion for inspiring women and girls to live bold lives of their own design whether it's skydiving or another big dream. Right now, I'm tackling one of my biggest challenges yet.

Project 19 was originally a concept created with the Women’s Skydiving Network (WSN) to build a 100-way Women’s “Vertical” (head-to-Earth) World Record Skydive in 2020 to celebrate the 100th Anniversary of a women’s right to vote in the United States. The COVID-19 pandemic put this mission on hold, but as one of the organizers, I am ready to get this thing off the ground – literally.

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The Power To Foster Speak-Up Culture For Longterm Payoffs

By Maria D’Avanzo

As a former chief ethics and compliance officer, I know firsthand the importance of creating a speak-up culture. Companies that value and encourage employees to express their fears, provide feedback, ask questions, report issues and concerns, and make suggestions without fear of retaliation are better able to identify troubling hotspots, reducing the financial and reputational risks to the organization. Such companies also benefit because their employees are usually more engaged, have trust in leadership and tend to stay around.

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The Power to Make HIV Healthcare Equitable and Accessible for Black Women

By Asha Dahya

I am an independent filmmaker, producer, author and TEDx Speaker. My short animated documentary, “Someone You Know,” profiles the stories of three women who had abortions late in their pregnancy. The goal is to dismantle stigma about later abortion, and foster empathy. In the lead-up to the mid-terms where reproductive rights are on the ballot in California, and Roe v Wade has now been overturned nationally, this film is my way of connecting women through the power of storytelling on a topic that is personal and important.

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The Power To Dismantle Stigma With Abortion Storytelling

By Asha Dahya

I am an independent filmmaker, producer, author and TEDx Speaker. My short animated documentary, “Someone You Know,” profiles the stories of three women who had abortions late in their pregnancy. The goal is to dismantle stigma about later abortion, and foster empathy. In the lead-up to the mid-terms where reproductive rights are on the ballot in California, and Roe v Wade has now been overturned nationally, this film is my way of connecting women through the power of storytelling on a topic that is personal and important.

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The Power To Change The Narrative

By Chanel Nicole Scott

“If they could see me now, what would they think of me?” When I left Nashville, I was broken, lost, and without hope for a brighter future. I was heartbroken, jobless, and without any prospect of recovery, healing, or prosperity.

After my time in Nashville, I lived the darkest days of my life. To make matters worse, I knew that those in Nashville who knew my story or pieces of it only thought the worst of me. I despise being misunderstood, and even though I left so much of my truth unsaid, staying was more traumatic than leaving.

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The Power To Change Mental Health Attitudes

By Cassandra Kandah

I watched her push herself out from the broken window, 40 stories up, from a skyscraper, in downtown Chicago. I screamed up to her, like I scream for all of those I know and have met with this type of pain, “It’s never worth it! There is always hope!” She thrusted herself out the window and I cried in terror as she fell to the ground with a “thud” that still shakes me to my core. I did not know this woman, but I knew since the advent of the covid-19 pandemic, the sheer volume of individuals coming to my clinic, endorsing suicidal thoughts, skyrocketed to as high as 80% of the new patients I saw.

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The Power To Change Menstrual Health Access and Eradicate Period Poverty

By Eiko La Boria and Sabrina Browne

Nationwide, 7 in 10 people agree that period poverty is a public health issue according to U By Kotex. At The Flow Initiative, we are committed to eradicating period poverty and accelerating access to menstrual health products in Hudson County, New Jersey, and nationwide.

Period poverty is the lack of access to menstrual products because of affordability. This can exclude women, young girls, non-binary, and trans-Americans from basic activities, from sports to socializing, or attending work or school. This is a global health issue and multi-layered crisis, that is often shrouded in silence, stigma, and shame. That's why The Flow Initiative is working to usher in a new dawn of menstrual equity for girls, women, and all who menstruate.

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The Power To Change Funding For Black Women's Businesses

By Ezinne Iroanya

I built SKNMUSE as a catalyst for Black and Brown folks to dwell in their beauty experience, combining luxury with cultural authenticity to produce luxurious beauty products that center rest and ease. Inspired by my first job as a perfumer, I realized that the existing skincare market did not cater to the needs of the Modern Black women and I wanted to fill that gap. For decades women who look like me have had to just make do, whipping formulas in our kitchens or using beauty products that never quite meet the bar.

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The Power To Organize and Change the World

By Heather Booth

While I was still in college in the 1960s, a friend of mine was raped at knifepoint, in her bed in off-campus housing. We went with her to Student Health to get her a gynecological exam. Student Health said they “didn’t cover gynecological exams.” She was given a lecture on her promiscuity.

Another friend contacted me and said his sister was pregnant and nearly suicidal, not ready to have a child. And she wanted an abortion. I hadn’t really thought about the issue before. It was a more innocent time, and in some ways, I was a more innocent person.

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The Power To Expand Histories By Amplifying Perspectives of Native American Leaders

By Nicole Anderson Cobb

Earlier this year, I was awarded an artist-in-residency at Allerton Park & Retreat Center where a colleague and I examined the history of the park and 19th century setter-Native American relations. I am deeply grateful to my Auburn Colloquium Colleagues and Citizen Potawatomi Nation Cultural Heritage Center educators for gently reminding me to make room for Native communities themselves in my work— spurring me to deeper allyship between African American and Native American educators.

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The Power to Harness Technology for Good

By Lian Pham

This philanthropic vision, and ‘pay it forward’ mentality, was inspired by my background. My parents fled Vietnam to the U.S. in 1975, sponsored by Jewish immigrants, who had themselves been sponsored decades prior, escaping to the US to start a new life. This ‘pay it forward’ of sponsorships changed the
trajectory of my life and influenced how I am as a person.

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The Power to Debunk the Effortless Perfection Myth

By Cara Peterson

Effortless Perfection tends to create environments where people are so set on making it seem like they have all things put together at all points in time that when they do inevitably struggle, they look around at their seemingly flawless peers and think they are the only ones struggling, causing them feel very isolated and alone.

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The Power To Change from the Inside, Out

By Nina Simons.

When I first realized how my own internalized gender biases and beliefs were limiting my choices, behavior and leadership, I was shocked, then enlivened. Excited to embark on altering them. I began exploring inwardly, excavating how unconscious cultural conditioning had contributed to the story about what I was capable of visioning or achieving in my life. 

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The Power To Know The Importance of DEI Accountability for Leadership

By Sharla Toller. There’s a significant difference between an organization saying, “We value Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) in the workplace,” and adequately holding its leaders in their organization accountable for upholding that reality and driving meaningful change. But it’s the accountability that really matters. That is what leads to sustainable and impactful change within an organization.

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