@article{2f1d4c1541e747c49efeb04d8307bbe3,
title = "Respectful Tribal Partnership: What Philanthropy Can Learn From the Navajo Nation{\textquoteright}s Collaborative Response to the COVID-19 Crisis",
abstract = "The gravity of the COVID-19 pandemic and its disparately harsh impact on Indigenous peoples, including the stark reality of a historical lack of access to essential services and health care, are now well known. COVID-19 death rates, aggregated through May 4, 2022, and normalized by population, show there have been far more Native American than white American deaths: 454 per 100,000 versus 327 per 100,000, respectively (APM Research Lab, 2022).",
keywords = "Collaborative philanthropy, Covid-19, Navajo nation, Tribal consultation, Tribal water access",
author = "Nancy Petersen and Karletta Chief and Massaro, {Toni M.} and Nikki Tulley and Crystal Tulley-Cordova and Jonelle Vold",
note = "Funding Information: Radio and print ads announcing the availability of the new transitional watering points were proposed to reach a population that stretches across an area larger than West Virginia, and, in its rural stretches, with fewer than 10 people per square mile. The funding to support this work was provided by the Haury Program, which functions as a philanthropic foundation, and the Southwest Research and Information Center; outreach was coordinated by DigDeep. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2022. Foundation Review.All Rights Reserved",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.9707/1944-5660.1611",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "14",
pages = "93--103",
journal = "Foundation Review",
issn = "1944-5660",
publisher = "Dorothy A. Johnson Center for Philanthropy, Grand Valley State University",
number = "2",
}