HOPE in Policy
The HOPE National Resource Center intends to help policymakers know more about Positive Childhood Experiences (PCEs).
The HOPE National Resource Center intends to help policymakers know more about Positive Childhood Experiences (PCEs).
The HOPE National Resource Center is now on social media! We launched our social media in February of this year and have spent the past several months growing our presence on both Twitter and LinkedIn.
In addition to creating our own materials, we partner with child and family service organizations around the country to add HOPE to their services and resources. This blog highlights two public resources that grew out of those partnerships.
The next HOPE Summit will take place on March 29th and March 30th, 2023!
This summer, four interns from Boston public high schools have joined the HOPE National Resource Center team!
Meet MyDzung Chu, our newest faculty member on the Center for Community Engaged Medicine, working alongside the HOPE team!
The HOPE National Resource Center joined with Amy Templeman, former chair of the federal Commission to Eliminate Child Abuse and Neglect Fatalities and published an opinion piece in The Hill to discuss the reasons why the feared epidemic of child abuse never happened.
This Father’s Day, the HOPE National Resource Center is celebrating the impact that fathers can have on access to positive childhood experiences.
Sunday, June 19th is a day of celebrating both freedom and fathers, and we are taking the opportunity to acknowledge the significance of Black fathers specifically by talking to John Verdejo, member of the FACEs (Family and Community Experts) of HOPE Advisory Council.
The HOPE National Resource Center is adopting the Key equity terms and concepts: A glossary for shared understanding, from the Center for the Study of Social Policy.