The Goldin Institute

Since 2002, the Goldin Institute has worked in over 50 countries to build grassroots partnerships for global change.

Our History

The Goldin Institute was founded by Diane Goldin and Travis Rejman in 2002 when grassroots leaders from Chicago and 14 countries spent a week sharing their unique community-building approaches and reflecting on how to design a platform that would help them work together. This meeting set the vision, mission and values for the Goldin Institute, with a core commitment to ensure that those closest to the issue, especially excluded voices with the most at stake, have leadership roles in any social change movement.
Since 2002, the Goldin Institute has worked in over 50 countries to build grassroots partnerships for global change that are rooted in the power of communities working together to build their own solutions and determine their own futures. We help communities achieve their goals through a combination of online and on the ground initiatives to help grassroots leaders address a wide range of issues facing their communities such as poverty alleviation, gender empowerment, environmental sustainability and conflict resolution. The growing network of 100 Alumni in our Chicago Peace Fellows program have joined forces to launch the Mutual Aid Collaborative as an ongoing base for continued collaboration. Collectively, our Global Alumni network has over 200 Fellows spanning over 50 countries who meet monthly for ongoing learning and collaboration. By linking grassroots efforts in our global network, we provide opportunities to build innovative multi-sector partnerships that both adapt to particular local contexts and draw from creative solutions and approaches from around the globe.
  • Build on our assets by inviting their neighbors to share their talents and activating our shared community assets. We start with what we have and focus on what’s working rather than what we lack and what’s broken.
  • Commit to equity and justice to get at the root of the issues and so that people who are too often left out can take leadership roles in our future. We know that our diversity helps us to see and change the system.
  • Enhance both trust and capacity recognizing that our ability to make real and sustainable progress requires us to maintain bonds that keep us going when times are tough. We balance building relationships and taking action.
  • Make local and global connections by linking grassroots efforts in our global network, we provide opportunities to adapt creative solutions to local contexts. We connect and equip a global network of grassroots leaders.
 

 

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