

Many thanks to The Chronicle of Philanthropy, where some of the material in this guide was first published. Thanks for editorial support to consulting editor Ross Mudrick, and copy editor Case Edwards.

Thanks to individual donors, including Alexandra Christy, Peter Dowson, Elizabeth Hakas, Jonathan Kauffman, Andy Veluswami, and anonymous donors. Fund, and the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation for their support of this guide.īoundless appreciation to the Nathan Cummings Foundation, and especially Maurine Knighton and Brandi Stewart, for being an outstanding partner with Narrative Arts since the beginning. Special thanks to the Skees Family Foundation for their belief in this project and for being the first grantmaker to support it.īig thanks also to the Open Society Foundations, the Evelyn and Walter Haas, Jr. Lastly, the guide features an afterword by Deepak Bhargava, the executive director of the Center for Community Change. The second edition of the guide covers how to develop a strategy to guide your work, how to tell great stories in any format and engage audiences, some methods used in telling stories for social change, and the structure you need to incorporate stories into your everyday work. Once you sign up, you can also download a PDF of the first edition of the guide, which was for grantmakers. Also fully linked, and in one easy-to-read document. PDF version is available by signing up using the form above.Share the whole guide or individual chapters by email and social media. ONLINE version has complete links to videos, articles and stories mentioned in the guide.The second edition of “Storytelling and Social Change” is available in two different formats.
