Nonprofit Funding, Jobs, & Events April 2023

By
Youth Collaboratory
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Funding

Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention’s Enhancing School Capacity to Address Youth Violence
OJJDP seeks to support targeted efforts to address youth violence through implementing evidence-based prevention and intervention efforts in a school-based setting (K–12th grade only). The goals of the program are to (1) reduce the incidence of school violence through improved school safety and climate and (2) prevent youth violence, delinquency, and victimization in the targeted community. This solicitation aims to increase school safety through the development and expansion of violence prevention and reduction programs and strategies. Through this initiative, OJJDP expects applicants to utilize a collaborative approach between schools and community-based organizations (CBOs) to develop and implement these strategies. Funded sites under this initiative will operate from the following three principles:

  • Relationships between schools and CBOs require open lines of communication and a shared commitment at the leadership level to accomplish the core goal of increasing school safety.
  • Key contributors to youth violence include risk factors within the individual, family, and school/community domains. Funded strategies must address all three to be successful.
  • Families are critical partners in dealing with school violence, and their engagement is a critical ingredient for success.

Deadline: Grants.Gov: May 3, 2023; JustGrants: May 17, 2023 | Learn more >>

Office for Victim of Crime’s Services for Victims of Human Trafficking
The purpose of this program is to develop, expand, or strengthen victim service programs for victims of human trafficking. Applicants are invited to apply under three program purpose areas.

  • Purpose Area 1: Developing Capacity to Serve Human Trafficking Victims: The purpose of these awards is to support:
    • Victim services organizations that have limited or no prior experience in serving victims of human trafficking, and/or
    • Victim service organizations that have limited or no prior experience in receiving direct federal funding to serve victims of human trafficking.
  • Purpose Area 2: Enhancing Access to Comprehensive Services for Human Trafficking Victims: Awards will be made to victim service organizations with a demonstrated history of serving human trafficking victims with a comprehensive range of direct services. The purpose of these awards is to enhance victims’ access to the diverse services that victims of labor and sex trafficking often require to address their needs.
  • Purpose Area 3: Specialized Services for Human Trafficking Victims: Awards will be made to victim service organizations with a demonstrated history of providing a specialized service beyond case management to victims of human trafficking. The goal is to increase the quality and quantity of the identified specialized service to assist victims of all forms of human trafficking.

Deadline: Grants.Gov: May 4, 2023; JustGrants: May 11, 2023 | Learn more >>

Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention’s Mentoring for Youth Affected by Opioid and Other Substance Misuse
OJJDP seeks to enhance and expand mentoring services for children and youth impacted by opioids and other drug misuse. OJJDP aims to assist youth and their families negatively affected by opioids and other substances, especially youth in historically marginalized and underserved communities who will benefit the most from prevention and intervention programs. The program's goal is to improve outcomes (such as improved academic performance and reduced school dropout rates) for youth impacted by opioids and other substance misuse through mentoring. There are two categories in this solicitation: 

  • Category 1: Mentoring Strategies for Youth Affected by Opioid and Other Substance Misuse (Project Sites): The focus of this category is to provide mentoring services as part of a prevention, treatment, recovery, and supportive approach for those youth impacted by substance misuse. 
  • Category 2: Statewide and Regional Mentoring Strategies for Youth Affected by Opioid and Other Substance Misuse: This category supports a broad-based approach to building mentoring program capacity in targeted regions throughout the country to help youth impacted by substance misuse. 

Deadline: Grants.Gov: May 4, 2023; JustGrants: May 18, 2023 | Learn more >>

Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration’s Planning and Developing Infrastructure to Promote the Mental Health of Children, Youth and Families in American Indian/Alaska Native (AI/AN) Communities
The purpose of this program is to provide tribes and tribal organizations with the tools and resources to plan and design a family-driven, community-based, and culturally and linguistically competent system of care. “A system of care is a spectrum of effective community-based services and supports for children and youth, with or at risk for mental health or other challenges, and their families, that is organized into a coordinated network, builds meaningful partnerships with families and youth, and addresses their cultural and linguistic needs, in order for them to function better at home, in school, and throughout life.” 

Deadline: May 5, 2023 | Learn more >>

Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration’s Treatment for Individuals with Serious Mental Illness, Serious Emotional Disturbance, or Co-Occurring Disorders Experiencing Homelessness
The purpose of the Treatment for Individuals Experiencing Homelessness (TIEH) program is to provide comprehensive, coordinated and evidenced-based services for individuals, youth, and families with a serious mental illness (SMI), serious emotional disturbance (SED) or co-occurring disorder (COD) who are experiencing homelessness or at imminent risk of homelessness (e.g., people exiting jail or prison without a place to live). Epidemiological studies have consistently found that about 25–30% of homeless persons have a severe mental illness such as schizophrenia. Recipients will be expected to:

  1. Engage and connect the population of focus to behavioral health treatment, case management, and recovery support services;
  2. Assist with identifying sustainable permanent housing by collaborating with homeless services organizations and housing providers, including public housing agencies; and 
  3. Provide case management that includes care coordination/service delivery planning and other strategies that support stability across services and housing transitions. 

Deadline: May 5, 2023 | Learn more >>

Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA)’s Healthy Transitions: Improving Life Trajectories for Youth and Young Adults with Serious Mental Disorders Program
The purpose of this program is to improve and expand access to developmentally, culturally, and linguistically appropriate services and supports for transition-aged youth and young adults (ages 16-25) who either have, or are at risk for developing, serious mental health conditions. Award recipients will be expected to identify and provide appropriate behavioral health interventions to transition-aged youth and young adults who are at risk for a serious emotional disturbance or serious mental illness. With this program, SAMHSA aims to improve emotional and behavioral health functioning so that this population of youth and young adults can maximize their potential to assume adult roles and responsibilities and lead full and productive lives. Healthy Transition award recipients will accomplish program goals by:

  1. Creating, implementing, and expanding services and supports that are developmentally appropriate, culturally competent, and youth and young adult driven; involve family and community members (including business leaders and faith-based organizations); and provide for continuity of care and support between youth- and adult-serving systems.
  2. Improving cross-system collaboration, service capacity, and expertise related to the transition-aged youth through infrastructure and organizational change at the state/territory OR tribe/tribal organization, political subdivision level.
  3. Implementing public awareness and cross-system provider training (e.g., higher education/community colleges, behavioral health, law enforcement, primary care, education, vocational services, and child welfare). 

Deadline: May 8, 2023 | Learn more >>

Bureau of Justice Assistance’s Preventing School Violence: BJA’s STOP School Violence Program
BJA seeks to increase school safety by implementing training that will improve school climate using school-based behavioral threat assessments and/or intervention teams to identify school violence risks among students, technological solutions shown to increase school safety such as anonymous reporting technology, and other school safety strategies that assist in preventing violence. Proposals may include one or more of the following areas: 

  1. Develop and operate technology solutions. 
  2. Develop and implement multidisciplinary behavioral threat assessment (BTA) and/or intervention teams. 
  3. Train school personnel and educate students on preventing school violence, including strategies to improve a school climate. 
  4. Provide specialized training or create specialized non-training policies for law enforcement who work in schools and/or with school-age populations such as school resource officers (SROs) and probation officers.
  5. Hiring school support personnel such as climate specialists, school psychologists, school social workers, school-based violence interrupters, and others directly supporting the prevention of school violence.

Deadline: Grants.Gov: May 8, 2023; JustGrants: May 15, 2023 | Learn more >>

MIT Solve: Indigenous Communities Fellowship
The 2023 Indigenous Communities Fellowship supports innovators in the U.S. and Canada, including territories, with community-based solutions by and for Indigenous communities that build upon traditional knowledge and technology to meet the social, environmental, and economic goals of Indigenous communities. Solve seeks solutions that: 

  1. Strengthen sustainable energy sovereignty and support climate resilience initiatives by and for Indigenous peoples; 
  2. Support the creation, growth, and success of Indigenous-owned businesses and promote economic opportunity in Indigenous communities; 
  3. Drive positive outcomes for Indigenous learners of any age and context through culturally grounded educational opportunities; and
  4. Promote culturally informed mental and physical health and wellness services for Indigenous community members.

Solutions do not need to be cross-border or international in scope and can focus on specific Indigenous communities in either country. Each selected Fellow will receive a $10,000 grant and the possibility of receiving additional prize funding.

Deadline: May 9, 2023 | Learn more >>

Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention’s Supporting Effective Interventions for Youth with Problematic or Illegal Sexual Behavior
The goal of this program is to prevent sexual reoffending by youth with problematic or illegal sexual behavior, promote healing, and provide services for victims and families/ caregivers. This program will assist applicants in developing comprehensive, multidisciplinary approaches to provide a continuum of intervention and supervision services for youth with problematic or illegal sexual behavior; and treatment services for child victims and their families/caregivers. Program objectives include: 

  • Improve family and system responses for youth with problematic or illegal sexual behavior as well as child victims and their families/caregivers. 
  • Increase protective factors in targeted youth to prevent sexual reoffending or continued problematic sexual behavior. 
  • Enhance existing community/system response by filling identified gaps in service provision/programming.

Deadline: Grants.Gov: May 11, 2023; JustGrants: May 25, 2023 | Learn more >> 

Office for Victims of Crime’s Preventing Trafficking of Girls
This program supports prevention and early intervention services for girls who are at-risk of, or are victims of, sex and/or labor trafficking. Services may be provided to girls and young women up to and including age 25. Project sites will:

  • Replicate and scale-up prevention and early intervention programs that have been rigorously evaluated and/or have been shown to be effective or promising and/or have a documented track record of producing successful outcomes for participants.
  • Implement or enhance efforts to identify and provide comprehensive, trauma-informed, developmentally appropriate, and culturally responsive services.

Deadline: Grants.Gov: May 16, 2023; JustGrants: May 23, 2023 | Learn more >>

Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention’s Opioid Affected Youth Initiative
This program supports the efforts of states, communities, jurisdictions, nonprofit organizations, for-profit organizations, and institutions of higher education to implement programs and strategies that identify, respond to, treat, and support children, youth, and families impacted by the opioid epidemic, and other substance use disorders, to ensure public safety. Through this program, OJJDP will support states and communities to develop coordinated responses to opioid and other substance use-related challenges that impact youth and community safety. Funding may be used to support programs and services to youth and families impacted by both opioids and other substance use disorders.

Deadline: Grants.Gov: May 16, 2023; JustGrants: May 30, 2023 | Learn more >>

Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention’s Mentoring Programs for Youth in the Juvenile Justice System
The program’s goal is to improve outcomes (such as improved academic performance and reduced school dropout rates) for youth involved in the juvenile justice system, and to reduce negative outcomes (including continued involvement in the juvenile justice system, substance use, and gang participation) through mentoring. Mentoring services must be targeted to those youth as a matter of diversion from an out-of-home placement in a juvenile detention or correctional facility. This solicitation is focused on diverting youth from further penetration into the juvenile justice system through diversion or as a complement to community-based probation services with the goal of expediting a youth’s release from the formal juvenile justice system. This does not include those youth who are currently placed in a juvenile correctional facility and/or those youth who have recently reentered their communities upon release from a juvenile correctional facility. Mentoring services can be one-on-one, group, peer, or a combination of these types. Applicants must initiate mentoring services to youth who are up to 21 years of age. 

Deadline: Grants.Gov: May 18, 2023; JustGrants: June 1, 2023 | Learn more >>

Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention’s Second Chance Act Youth Reentry
This program encourages collaboration between state agencies, local government, and community- and faith-based organizations to address the challenges that reentry and recidivism reduction pose for moderate- to high-risk youth returning to their communities from juvenile residential or correctional facilities. It provides funding to support states, units of local government, and community-based organizations to develop programs to provide comprehensive reentry services for moderate- to high-risk youth before, during, and after release from confinement; support transitional services to assist youth's successful reintegration into the community; deliver relevant training to key stakeholders positioned to impact youth’s reentry process; and support a robust training and technical assistance program. This solicitation provides funding for three categories: 

  • Category 1: Improving Youth Reentry
  • Category 2: Strengthening Community-Based Youth Reentry Programs
  • Category 3: Youth Reentry Training and Technical Assistance

Deadline: Grants.Gov: May 23, 2023; JustGrants: June 5, 2023 | Learn more >>

Office of Victims of Crime’s Anti-Trafficking Housing Assistance Program
The purpose of this program is to develop, expand, and/or strengthen funded organizations so they can provide housing and associated support services to victims of human trafficking. Applicants are invited to apply under three program purpose areas.

  • Purpose Area 1: Developing Capacity to Provide Housing Assistance to Human Trafficking Victims - The purpose of these awards is to support: 
    • organizations that have experience providing housing services but that have limited or no prior experience in serving victims of human trafficking,
    • anti-trafficking organizations that have limited or no prior experience in providing housing services to victims of human trafficking, or
    • organizations that have no prior experience in receiving direct federal funding to serve victims of human trafficking.
  • Purpose Area 2: Enhancing Access to Housing Assistance for Human Trafficking Victims
    - Awards will be made to organizations with a demonstrated history of providing human trafficking victims with housing assistance and support services (or that have a formal partnership with a victim service provider with demonstrated experience).
  • Purpose Area 3: Housing Training and Technical Assistance - The purpose of this project is to:
    • support OVC’s human trafficking housing grantees and their partners in meeting their award goals and objectives; and
    • provide practitioner-driven, evidence-based TTA to victim service providers and housing entities to develop, expand, or enhance housing assistance for all victims of human trafficking.

Deadline: Grants.Gov: May 30, 2023; JustGrants: June 5, 2023 | Learn more >>

Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention’s Second Chance Act Addressing the Needs of Incarcerated Parents and Their Minor Children
This program will provide funding to support states, units of local government, and community-based organizations to develop programs within detention or correctional facilities to respond to the needs of incarcerated parents who have children younger than age 18. This program supports activities that foster positive family engagement between incarcerated parents and their children within detention and correctional facilities, including juvenile detention and correctional facilities with young fathers, and implement programs and services that support the children of incarcerated parents to reduce the likelihood of antisocial behaviors and future involvement in the juvenile justice system. This solicitation is composed of two grant categories:

  • Category 1: Addressing the Needs of Incarcerated Parents and Their Minor Children Programs and Services
  • Category 2: Addressing the Needs of Incarcerated Parents and Their Minor Children Training and Technical Assistance

Deadline: Grants.Gov: May 30, 2023; JustGrants: June 12, 2023 | Learn more >>

Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention’s Multistate Mentoring Programs Initiatives
With this solicitation, OJJDP seeks to fund mentoring organizations to enhance and expand mentoring services for children and youth who are at risk or high risk for juvenile delinquency, victimization, and juvenile justice system involvement. This program supports the implementation and delivery of mentoring services to youth populations that are at risk or high risk for juvenile delinquency, victimization, and juvenile justice system involvement. Mentoring services can be one-on-one, group, peer, or a combination of these types. Applicants must initiate mentoring services to youth who are 17 years old or younger at the time of admission to the program. Mentors must be an adult (age 18 or older), or in cases where peer mentoring models are being implemented, an older peer and under adult supervision. The target population should include those youth who are at risk or high risk for delinquency or victimization and/or are involved in the juvenile justice system. There are three categories in this solicitation: 

  • Category 1: Mentoring Organizations (1 state)
  • Category 2: Mentoring Organizations (2 to 10 states)
  • Category 3: Mentoring Organizations (11 to 44 states)

Deadline: Grants.Gov: May 30, 2023; JustGrants: June 12, 2023 | Learn more >>

Office of Victims of Crime’s Integrated Services for Minor Victims of Human Trafficking
The purpose of this program is to enhance the quality and quantity of services available to assist minor victims of human trafficking. It will provide funding for services to victims of severe forms of human trafficking, as defined in 22 U.S.C. § 7102(11): 

  • Sex trafficking in which a commercial sex act is induced by force, fraud, or coercion, or in which the person induced to perform such an act has not attained 18 years of age. 
  • The recruitment, harboring, transportation, provision, or obtaining of a person for labor or services through the use of force, fraud, or coercion for the purpose of subjection to involuntary servitude, peonage, debt bondage, or slavery.

Organizations funded under this program will be expected to implement developmentally appropriate and evidence-based practices widely accepted in other child- and youth-serving systems. Eligibility for services under this grant are limited to victims who were trafficked and began receiving services while under age 18; however, receipt of services can extend beyond the age of 18, as needed. Reintegration with and support for healthy family members or caregivers is a critical component of the minor’s long-term success. Services may also extend to the victim’s children, supportive non-offending parents, caregivers, sponsors, and guardians, if these services are identified as impacting the minor’s safety, security, and healing. 

Deadline: Grants.Gov: June 6, 2023; JustGrants: June 13, 2023 | Learn more >>

Administration for Children and Families’ Basic Center Program
The Basic Center Program (BCP) provides temporary shelter and counseling services to youth who have left home without permission of their parents or guardians, have been forced to leave home, or other homeless youth who might otherwise end up in the law enforcement or in the child welfare, mental health, or juvenile justice systems. BCPs work to establish or strengthen community-based programs that meet the immediate needs of runaway and homeless youth and their families. BCP grant recipients provide youth under 18 years of age with emergency shelter, food, clothing, counseling and referrals for health care. BCP grant recipients can provide up to 21 days of shelter for youth and seek to reunite young people with their families, whenever possible, or to locate appropriate alternative placements. Additional services may include: street-based services; home-based services for families with youth at risk of separation from the family; drug abuse education and prevention services; and at the request of runaway and homeless youth, testing for sexually transmitted diseases.

Deadline: June 9, 2023 | Learn more >>

Administration for Children and Families’ National Communication System for Runaway and Homeless Youth Program
The Administration for Children and Families (ACF), Administration on Children, Youth and Families (ACYF), Family and Youth Services Bureau (FYSB) will award one cooperative agreement on a competitive basis for a period of three years to operate the National Communication System (NCS) for Runaway and Homeless Youth Program. The NCS Program is a dedicated toll-free, U.S. national communication system that provides information, referral services, crisis intervention, prevention approaches, and other supportive services to vulnerable, at-risk, and runaway and homeless youth and their families or legal guardians. The purpose of the NCS is to a) prevent youth from running away and becoming homeless, and b) link youth with a family member or guardian, and/or an available resource that can provide and/or assist the youth in acquiring needed services, and c) increase prevention education to reduce runaway incidents and youth homelessness. To fulfill the objectives of the legislation, the NCS must provide, among other services, a neutral and confidential channel of communication (online and off lines services) that is available on a 24-hours per day, seven days per week, basis throughout the United States to ensure a youth contemplating running away, youth who are on the run, and those experiencing homelessness can receive crisis services interventions and referrals or re-establish communication with their parents or legal guardians if possible.

Deadline: June 9, 2023 | Learn more >>

Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention’s Youth Violence Prevention Program
The goal of this program is to prevent youth violence, including youth gang/group violence, through data-driven strategies. This solicitation is focused on youth who are at risk of committing violence. This solicitation distinguishes between youth who are “at risk” and those who are at the “highest risk” for committing or becoming a victim of violence. Strategies funded through this solicitation may work in coordination with community violence intervention (CVI) strategies that target youth at the highest risk of violence, but the focus for this solicitation is on delivering prevention and early intervention services for at-risk youth. Project sites are expected to use funding to develop and implement violence prevention strategies targeted toward middle and high school age youth who have multiple risk factors for violence. Specific objectives include: 

  • Increase protective factors to prevent violence and delinquent behavior by youth.
  • Implement data-driven, evidence-informed, and community-led approaches.
  • Develop and/or enhance direct service programs for youth with multiple risk factors for violence. 

Deadline: Grants.Gov: June 12, 2023; JustGrants: June 26, 2023 | Learn more >>

Administration for Children and Families’ Street Outreach Program
The Street Outreach Program provides street-based services to runaway, homeless, and street youth who are under 21 years of age and who have been subjected to or are at risk of being subjected to sexual abuse, prostitution, sexual exploitation, and severe forms of human trafficking in persons. SOP will build relationships between street outreach workers and youth to assist them in moving to a safe and stable housing or emergency shelter and prepare them for independence. These services, targeted in areas where street youth congregate, are designed to assist such youth in making healthy choices and providing them access to shelter as well as basic needs, including food, hygiene packages and information on a range of available services.

Deadline: June 20, 2023 | Learn more >>

Administration for Children and Families’ Runaway Homeless Youth Training, Technical Assistance, and Capacity Building Center (RHYTTAC)
The Family and Youth Services Bureau (FYSB), Runaway Homeless Youth (RHY) Training, Technical Assistance, and Capacity Building Center (RHYTTAC) provides direct training and technical assistance to existing RHY grant recipients and subrecipients to enhance their efforts to successfully implement projects supported by FYSB grant funds. FYSB expects to award one cooperative agreement to strengthen and build the capacity of runaway and homeless youth and other youth-serving professionals and service providers across the nation by:  Developing relevant and interactive training products for in-person and virtual adaptation. Disseminating evidenced-based, evidence-informed, and best practices related to issues impacting youth who have runaway from home, youth and young adults experiencing homelessness, and youth and young adults at risk of becoming homeless. Providing targeted technical assistance to RHY recipients and youth-serving organizations to address current and potential needs. Leading coordination activities among RHY recipients and other RHY funded partner organizations. The recipient must serve all ten ACF Federal Regions and may include subcontractors or subrecipients, at its option, to provide services that will cover the regional multi-State areas.

Deadline: June 20, 2023 | Learn more >>

Department of Housing and Urban Development’s Youth Homeless Demonstration Program
The goal of the Youth Homeless Demonstration Program (YHDP) is to support selected communities in the development and implementation of a coordinated community approach to preventing and ending youth homelessness. This community planning approach supports the foundations outlined in “All In” and will guide communities in designing solutions that match the needs in their community and sharing that experience with and mobilizing communities around the country toward the same end. The population to be served by this demonstration program is youth experiencing homelessness, aged 24 and under, including unaccompanied youth and pregnant or parenting youth who are experiencing homelessness. Funding of approximately $60,000,000 is available through this NOFO. HUD expects to make approximately 25 awards from the funds available under this NOFO.

Deadline: June 27, 2023 | Learn more >>

Administration for Children and Families’ Victims of Human Trafficking in Native Communities Demonstration (VHT-NC) Program
Program’s goal is to directly fund organizations that will build, expand, and sustain organizational and community capacity to deliver services to Native American (i.e., American Indians, Alaska Natives, Native Hawaiians, and/or Pacific Islanders) adults and minors who have experienced a severe form of human trafficking as defined by the Trafficking Victims Protection Act (TVPA) of 2000, as amended, through the provision of direct services, assistance, and referrals. The following activities are required under the VHT-NC Demonstration Program: 

  1. Provision of comprehensive, culturally and linguistically responsive case management to Native Americans who have experienced sex and labor trafficking;
  2. Outreach efforts to increase identification of Native Americans who have experienced sex and labor trafficking; and
  3. Public awareness activities for the local community and organizations that may encounter individuals who have experienced sex and labor trafficking.

Deadline: June 30, 2023 | Learn more >>

Administration for Children and Families’ Domestic Victims of Human Trafficking Services and Outreach (DVHT-SO) Program
The goal of the DVHT-SO Program is to fund organizations that will build, expand, and sustain organizational and local capacity to deliver services to domestic victims of severe forms of human trafficking as defined by the Trafficking Victims Protection Act (TVPA) of 2000, as amended through victim outreach, identification, case management, direct services, assistance, and referrals. Under the DVHT-SO Program, the following activities are required:

  • Comprehensive case management and services to adults and children who have experienced human trafficking; and 
  • Outreach to increase identification of adults and children who have experienced sex and labor trafficking.

The DVHT-SO Program is informed by a whole-family approach that focuses equally and intentionally on services and opportunities for individuals who have experienced human trafficking and their immediate family members living within their households. OTIP encourages community partnerships, meaningful engagement of individuals who have experienced human trafficking, and hiring qualified professionals from the communities being served under the DVHT-SO Program. Recipients will undergo a 12-month project implementation period to establish partnerships, on-board new staff, and develop a victim service protocol and a sustainability plan. Clients must receive direct services and assistance through the DVHT-SO Program during the 12-month project implementation period. In addition, there is a statutorily mandated 25 percent match (cash or in-kind) requirement for each budget period.

Deadline: June 30, 2023 | Learn more >>

Free Webinars and Trainings

How to Improve Children’s Mental Health Service Systems
Chapin Hall
May 8, 2023
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Culture as Prevention Series: Tribal Notification when Native Youth are Involved in State or Local Juvenile Justice Systems
Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention
May 11, 2023
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SAMHSA Efforts to Support Youth Experiencing Homelessness 
Family Youth Services Bureau
May 16, 2023
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Centering Equity in Systems Change
Upswell
June 20, 2023
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Events

Igniting Sparks
Search Institute
April 25-26, 2023
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Global Intergenerational Conference
Generations United
July 26-28, 2023
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National Symposium on Juvenile Services
Reentry Employment Opportunities
October 3-6, 2023
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Jobs