Through an 8-month engagement, Reimagine Lab fellows further developed their concepts into projects. Early work included developing strategy documents, further user engagement co-creation, partnership development, and other due diligence to ensure all aspects of the project ideas have been fully flushed out. This effort included developing relationships with key partners, influencers, and funders. Gobee worked
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Year 2: Six-month Prototyping Phase
2019 Program Overview The objective of Reimagine Lab 2019 was to give fellows opportunities to further explore the concepts they created in 2018 through prototyping. At the conclusion of Reimagine Lab in 2018, there was no expectation that the lab would continue. Fellows were eager to continue what they had come up with and were
Year 1: Six-month Design Lab
2018 Program Overview Reimagine Lab was a six-month design lab for 16 fellows passionate about preventing cycles of family and domestic violence to come together to work with other creative individuals from both inside and outside the domestic violence field. These Reimagine Lab fellows came together to envision a California free from domestic violence and
Using technology to reach adolescents and prevent domestic violence [BLOG]
Reimagine Lab: Preventing cycles of violence, now and into the future is a human-centered design lab supported by the Foundation that produced new and innovative solutions to breaking the cycle of domestic and family violence. The lab launched in 2018, with 16 community fellows from diverse backgrounds and from across California from inside and outside the domestic
Using “influencers” to advocate for domestic violence prevention [BLOG]
Team Jorge Fernandez, Director of Behavioral Health, Golden Valley Health Centers Sandra Henriquez, Chief Executive Officer, California Coalition Against Sexual Assault Sharon Turner, Transformative Coach, The Next Step Consulting Location: Statewide User Group: Community Influencer Influencers 4 Justice partners with and invests in non-traditional community partners (e.g. artists, faith leaders,
Engaging Black men and boys in domestic violence prevention [BLOG]
Team Sonya Young Aadam, Chief Executive Officer, California Black Women’s Health Project Location: Statewide User Group: Black Men & Boys AVV is an innovative anti-violence social intervention model. The project includes potential investment in Black male entrepreneurs and Black male-led organizations and agencies to support embedding an aspect of partner,
History Reimagined: Building confident and resilient youth to prevent domestic violence [BLOG]
Team Addison Rose Vincent, Founder and Lead Consultant, Break The Binary LLC; Interim Executive Director of the Nonbinary & Intersex Recognition Project (NIRP) Ana Rosa Najera, Certified Facilitator, Lumos Transforms, Clinical Supervisor for Green Dot Public School, Bilingual & Multicultural Holistic Therapist/owner at Self Integration Guidance Location: Los Angeles
Reimagine Lab: Re-engaged [BLOG]
At the Foundation, we’ve always believed it’s possible to imagine a California free from domestic and family violence. Since we announced our new strategic direction in 2018, a focus on prevention has been at the heart of our work to break the cycle of domestic violence. We believe that we can disrupt multigenerational cycles of violence
Reflections on Reimagining: Eight things we learned from launching a design lab to prevent domestic violence [BLOG]
Reimagine Lab started with the assumption that bringing together a diverse group of leaders from across California to apply human-centered design to domestic violence prevention would lead to promising new solutions. When we announced the selection of Reimagine Lab fellows in early 2018, we were excited to test this assumption and to see what the Lab would spark within
Using Human-Centered Design to Address Domestic Violence: Q & A with Jaspal Sandhu [BLOG]
Jaspal Sandhu, PhD, Managing Partner of Gobee Group, a leading health and social impact design firm, and Professor of Practice in Maternal, Child and Adolescent Health at UC Berkeley, School of Public Health, joined Amanda Kim, Communications Officer at the Foundation, to talk about representation, collaborative problem-solving, and the importance of lived experience in creating