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FREE copy of the program, click here.
Reporters:
Please call Erin Skene, 517/492-2400, for a free copy
of any of the following publications and for further information
about reporting on nonprofits.
A
Journalist's Guide to Covering Nonprofit Organizations
and Their People by Burnis Reginald Morris (Washington,
D.C.: INDEPENDENT SECTOR, 1998, 74 pages). This book explains
why covering nonprofits is newsworthy, illustrates the
scope of the sector and gives an insiders perspective
as to how to find information about nonprofits for stories.
Economic Benefits of Michigan's Nonprofit Sector by
Robert J. Kleine (Lansing, MI: Public Sector Consultants,
Inc., 1999, 61 pages). This report presents the first
detailed analysis of the economic contribution of Michigan
nonprofits. The document presents analysis of data from
nearly 38,000 nonprofit organizations doing business in
Michigan. This project was sponsored by Michigan Nonprofit
Research Program and The Aspen Institute.
Setting the Record Straight
on Michigan's Nonprofit Community
by Michigan Public Policy Initiative (Lansing, MI:
Michigan Nonprofit Association, 2000, 44 pages).
This booklet promotes an understanding of the nonprofit
sector, demonstrates its role in society, and dispel a
host of misconceptions about nonprofits, many of which
have surfaced in recent years. It also explores challenges
facing nonprofits in a changing economic and political
landscape, and suggests strategies for responding to these
issues.
Giving and Volunteering in Michigan by Mark Wilson,
Michigan State University (East Lansing, MI: Michigan
Nonprofit Association and Council of Michigan Foundations,
2000, 6 pages). This publication is the executive summary
from the first state-wide survey on individual giving
and volunteering by Michigan residents. The survey indicates
who is giving and volunteering and why they are doing
so.
Michigan
Attorney General Charitable Trust Section functions
for Michigan citizens as a repository of financial and
other information about charities they may want to support.
At any one time there are more than 3,000 charities licensed
by the Attorney General's Charitable Trust Section. Most
charities soliciting contributions in Michigan are required
to be licensed by the Charitable Trust Section. One of
the goals of the Attorney General is to help educate the
public and to assist them in making wise choices about
what charities to support.
INDEPENDENT
SECTOR is a national coalition of voluntary organizations,
foundations and corporate giving programs that works to
encourage philanthropy, volunteering, not-for-profit initiative
and citizen action.
GuideStar
is a free, searchable Internet database that includes
financial reports and program summaries on more than 40,000
nonprofit organizations. The financial information is
gleaned from IRS Form 990s (required of most charities),
and additional data is collected from nonprofits that
respond to GuideStar's annual survey.
BBB
Wise Giving Alliance is a merger of the National Charities
Information Bureau and the Council of Better Business
Bureau's Foundation Service. The Alliance reports on nationally
soliciting charitable organizations that are the subject
of donor inquiries. These reports include an evaluation
of the subject charity in relation to the 23 provisions
of the voluntary CBBB Standards for Charitable Solicitations.
The BBB Wise Giving Alliance also offers guidance on making
informed giving decisions and publishes the quarterly
Better Business Bureau Wise Giving Guide.
American
Institute for Philanthropy is a clearinghouse of information
on nonprofit organizations' activities and finances.