Tag: federal funding
Building Responsible Fatherhood Into the Architecture of Family Policy and Federal Funding
The opportunity in front of the responsible fatherhood field is not only to preserve resources but to clarify relevance. Our field has matured beyond the point where it should be treated as a stand-alone niche. It now has enough research, practice, and systems experience to demonstrate that father engagement affects outcomes across multiple domains: child well-being, co-parenting, family economic stability, system navigation, and community support.
The more clearly the field can connect this work to family outcomes that other systems already value, the more durable its place becomes.
America’s Most Expensive Blind Spot: The $154 Billion Cost of Ignoring Fathers
This report lands because it restores dignity to the fatherhood conversation and refuses to reduce fathers to heroes or hazards. It frames fathers as economic actors, relational anchors, and public health factors. It suggests that improving father involvement is not just about a man “doing right.” It’s about building conditions where doing right is possible, repeatable, and supported.
If America is willing to spend $154.2 billion cleaning up the consequences of instability, America should be willing to spend far less building stability. This frees the fatherhood conversation from ideology and moves it toward stewardship.
The Hard Truth About Federal Funding and Philanthropic Giving
Nonprofit leaders must build organizations strong enough, deep enough, and clear enough in purpose to ensure that no funding source — federal, philanthropic, or private — ever becomes the author of their mission.



