We are now accepting applications for the upcoming 2023 class of the RESULTS Advocacy & Organizing Fellowship. Click here for application details.
Application deadline: October 31, 2022
The RESULTS Fellowship is an 11-month program designed for activists ages 20-35 to harness the power of their voice, sharpen their advocacy and organizing skills, and take action with dozens of other dynamic young leaders. RESULTS Fellows advocate at the intersections of poverty and anti-oppression and learn how to work with the media, their communities, and policymakers to create change.
The RESULTS Fellowship is a transformational experience. We are so proud of all the unique ways RESULTS Fellows have influenced a larger movement against poverty, oppression, and inequality. Fellowship Alumni have gone on to work at the World Bank, birddogged presidential candidates on the campaign trail, founded their own nonprofit organizations, and have been featured in publications like NPR and the New York Times.
We hope you will become part of our powerful cohort of activists! You can learn how to apply, find more details about the program, and read our FAQ in our RESULTS Fellowship Application Guide.
The roots of poverty and systemic oppression are inextricably linked. Our movement seeks to be representative of voices from people of all backgrounds, people who are currently experiencing poverty, or people from communities who historically have been marginalized by oppression.
If you are interested, please submit an application by October 31, 2022 and read our RESULTS Fellowship Overview and Application Guide for more details! We look forward to hearing from you.
This fall Senator Sinema has been in the national headlines almost daily as Congress debates the essential recovery package. Her office is getting inundated with calls from lobbyists and activists and journalists from every part of the country. So the first time I met with her staff, I was incredibly nervous, wondering how I was even qualified.
The first time I met with a congressional office, I was sitting in my car in the parking lot outside a busy coffee shop and feeling nervous. A few members of my RESULTS group and I were meeting virtually with our senator’s staff, and it was a little overwhelming not knowing what to expect.
Some kids look forward to their birthdays, or holidays. When I was young, my brother and I looked forward to tax time.
A little under four years ago, my children and I were facing homelessness. I was in an abusive relationship that was threatening my life. I had to get out.
We caught up with Jericho during the REAL Change Policy Summit as he buzzed around Capitol Hill between meetings with congressional offices.
The day that Rachel Azanleko-Akouete’s letter-to-the-editor was published in her local newspaper, she forwarded the link to her congressman’s office.
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