Category: Helping People
Curated guides on the organizations protecting civil rights, fighting hunger, and supporting communities. Find resources for donors, advocates, and anyone ready to take action for people in need.
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Understanding The Trevor Project Research Briefs
The Trevor Project research briefs provide concise research on LGBTQ+ youth mental health, suicide risk, care access, crisis services, school climate, family support, and related social conditions. Each brief translates survey findings or topic-specific analysis into applied evidence for clinical, educational, policy, communications, and program design contexts. The archive has practical value because each publication…
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Beginner’s Guide to The Trevor Project Support
In many homes and schools, a young person had carried questions about identity before anyone else understood how heavy those questions had become. A family dinner, a hallway, or a late-night message from a friend could have felt unsafe when fear, rejection, or isolation had already gathered. The Trevor Project support had existed for LGBTQ+…
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How-To Partner with The Trevor Project
You do not partner with The Trevor Project for a polished logo moment. You do it because LGBTQ+ young people face crisis, rejection, harassment, isolation, and systems that still fail them. That reality should push you toward action. Not vague concern. Not performative branding. Real support. The Trevor Project supports LGBTQ+ young people through crisis…
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Financial Abuse Help: Safety, Credit, and Recovery
Financial abuse help belongs inside domestic violence response because economic control can restrict housing, transportation, employment, childcare, healthcare, documents, bank access, and credit standing. Money functions as safety infrastructure when access to basic needs depends on income, savings, accounts, and financial records. Financial abuse means control through money, work, debt, credit, bank access, transportation, housing,…
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How Survivors Found Financial Abuse Help
Financial abuse had shaped many homes before family members, friends, or advocates had a clear name for it. Money, debt, work, banking access, credit, transportation, and financial records had become ways one person controlled another person’s choices. For many survivors, safety had not only meant leaving harm; it had also meant finding rent, food, childcare,…
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Financial Abuse Help for Survivors
You cannot treat financial abuse like a side problem. That mistake is dangerous, and survivors pay for it with housing, work, transportation, credit, healthcare, and safety. When someone controls your money, accounts, documents, debt, or job access, they control the exits. Financial abuse help matters because safety costs money. Financial abuse is domestic violence. They…
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Asian Americans Advancing Justice Resource Analysis
Asian Americans Advancing Justice Resource Analysis Asian Americans Advancing Justice, commonly identified through AAJC, functions as a national civil rights resource structure for Asian American, Native Hawaiian, Pacific Islander, and immigrant populations. AAJC public materials concentrate civil rights information, voting assistance, anti-hate reporting, language access guidance, legal referral pathways, and public policy research into a…
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Asian Americans Advancing Justice Community Help
Asian Americans Advancing Justice Resources and Community Help Asian Americans Advancing Justice Resources had often appeared when a family, friend, elder, student, or neighbor needed help understanding civil rights, voting, language access, or hate reporting. We had seen those searches begin with worry. She may have needed to report an anti-Asian hate incident, he may…


