Common Justice, directed by Stoneleigh Foundation Fellow Danielle Sered, received a major matching grant from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation to address cycles of youth violence as a health concern. The grant was awarded through the Foundation’s Local Funding Partnerships program, which supports community-based projects that develop new, collaborative, creative solutions to improve health and health care for society’s most vulnerable people. It matches local project funding from the Blue Ridge Foundation, the Daniel and Florence Guggenheim Foundation and the Jacob and Valeria Langeloth Foundation. As the nation’s largest philanthropy devoted exclusively to improving the health and health care of all Americans, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation works with a diverse group of organizations and individuals to identify solutions and achieve comprehensive, meaningful and timely change. For more information, visit www.rwjf.org.
Danielle Sered and Common Justice receive grant from Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
July 1, 2009
Related Fellow
Who We Are
The Stoneleigh Foundation was founded in 2006 by John and Chara Haas to improve the life outcomes of our community's youth. We meet our mission by awarding Fellowships to exceptional leaders who advance change in the systems that serve these young people.
Our Priorities
We seek to improve the life outcomes of our community’s youth by advancing change in the systems that serve them. Because we believe that youth are best served when systems work together to holistically address their needs, Stoneleigh prioritizes work designed to strengthen coordination between or among these systems.
Our Projects
We award two types of projects that catalyze change within, alongside, and outside of youth-serving systems. Our Fellowship Projects enhance how systems work together, improve practice, shift narratives, and generate new knowledge through action-oriented research. Our Youth Partnership Projects support youth-centric organizations that build the leadership and advocacy skills of young people.
Apply
We award two types of Fellowships to exceptional individuals who work within and alongside youth-serving systems to catalyze change. Our Fellows undertake projects that enhance how systems work together, improve practice, and generate new knowledge through action-oriented research.
- Stoneleigh Fellowship
Now accepting applications
- Emerging Leader Fellowship
Now accepting applications