Job Board
Native Americans in Philanthropy is dedicated to increasing and nurturing Indigenous representation in the philanthropic sector. With that in mind, the opportunities on our Job Board fit one of the following criteria:
- The position is within a philanthropic or nonprofit organization
- The position itself is philanthropic in nature and/or focuses on roles essential to or valued by the philanthropic sector i.e. fundraising, grantmaking, gift processing or development, donor relations, nonprofit management and/or administration, social justice, equity, conservation, etc.
Please submit your job opportunity here and note that assessment and approval of submissions can take up to 48 hours.
NOTE: Positions marked as "Featured" are either Native-focused roles or based at organizations focused on Native communities.
Racial Justice Program Officer
Job Details
Racial Justice Program Officer
ABOUT THE DAVID AND LUCILE PACKARD FOUNDATION
Founded in 1964 by David and Lucile Packard, The David and Lucile Packard Foundation (the Foundation) is a family philanthropy dedicated to supporting leaders and organizations around the world working to invest in children and families, protect and restore the natural world, and create just and inclusive societies. For more than six decades, the Foundation has advanced scientific innovation, championed reproductive health and rights, conserved and restored our natural world, and invested in the well-being of children and families. The Foundation's goals today include:
• Build Just Societies: support a strong civil society and inclusive institutions and governance to build just and equitable societies for all people.
• Protect and Restore Our Natural World: champion bold climate solutions, an ocean that sustains us, and scientific innovation and discovery to secure the health and future of people and planet.
• Invest in Families and Communities: prioritize the importance of children having a healthy start and promoting resilient and vibrant communities where children and families thrive, so they have the power to shape their lives.
To achieve lasting change, the Foundation also strives to address root causes of longstanding problems, including building a thriving, resilient U.S. democracy; advancing racial justice in the United States and gender equity globally; and supporting a strong civil society around the globe.
Inclusive collaboration is the heart of the Foundation's approach, with the belief that actively listening to and learning from people with a wide range of views is the best way to create solutions that match the scale and urgency of the challenges we face. The Foundation is dedicated to supporting community-based solutions shaped by the knowledge and experience of the people whose lives are most affected and informed by data, recognizing that meaningful solutions require patience, urgency, and supporting the conditions for transformational change. The Foundation is committed to addressing complex issues over the long term while making tangible progress today.
The Foundation's Vision, Mission, and Values are as follows:
• Vision: A just and equitable world where both people and nature flourish.
• Mission: We work with people and communities to create enduring solutions for just societies and a healthy, resilient natural world.
• Values: Equity, Integrity, Belief in Individual Leadership, Thinking Big, Respect, and Effectiveness.
U.S. RACIAL JUSTICE INITIATIVE
As the Packard Foundation advances its goal to “Build Just Societies,” essential to supporting thriving families, strong communities, and a sustainable natural world, it is clear that advancing racial justice in the United States is essential—both in its own right and to a healthy democracy, where the full participation, representation, and protection of all communities are safeguarded.
The https://www.packard.org/insights/perspective/deepening-our-commitment-to-racial-justice/ aims to accelerate progress toward just and equitable outcomes for Black people and communities, creating ripple effects that expand opportunity, improve social and economic outcomes, and build a more just society for everyone.
We advance this goal through grantmaking across three interconnected portfolios:
• Strengthening the leadership and voices of those most affected by injustice in the U.S. South, so they can help shape our collective future.
• Investing efforts to defend the constitutional and legal rights guaranteed to all.
• Catalyzing big ideas that propel us toward a more just and equitable future.
Together, these efforts contribute to a nation more fully aligned with its highest ideals.
THE PROGRAM OFFICER ROLE
Located within the Just Societies goal area and reporting to the Director of the Racial Justice Initiative, this Program Officer will lead a grantmaking portfolio focused on defending and advancing constitutional and civil rights as a core strategy for racial justice. They need to bring strong knowledge of civil rights, particularly the 14th Amendment framework, and the ability to translate theory, application, and strategy into clear, actionable grantmaking approaches. They will be able to identify which legal strategies create meaningful opportunities to advance racial justice and shape funding partnerships that advance the work.
The Program Officer will design and manage a portfolio that supports work across litigation, enforcement, community leadership, and public narrative. They will build relationships with legal experts, advocates, and community leaders, and collaborate with colleagues and funding partners to strengthen impact.
The ideal candidate is a strong analytical thinker who is comfortable navigating complexity and change. They bring a clear commitment to equity and racial justice, communicate effectively, and center the perspectives of impacted communities in their work. They will also bring a nonpartisan, innovative, creative approach to this work, and will stay abreast of emerging trends, synthesizing information across a dynamic field, to inform strategy.
OPPORTUNITIES
Grantmaking and Strategic Leadership
• In partnership with the Director, lead the development and implementation of the strategy for one or more portfolios within the Racial Justice initiative.
• Lead all aspects of annual grantmaking, assessing opportunities, recommending new grants, managing relationships with grantee partners, and evaluating the impact of investments.
• Empower and enable grantee partners to achieve meaningful impact through specific policy and programmatic objectives, providing expertise/technical assistance as needed.
• Clearly and consistently communicate with grant recipients, staff, and other partners in a transparent, timely, and respectful manner.
• Partner with other Foundation staff, consultants, and grantees to ensure effective grantmaking and that deadlines and budgets are met or readjusted as needed.
• Manage the grant proposal process and contribute to the shaping of proposals.
• Manage complex processes and projects involving multiple institutions and cross-functional Foundation teams.
• Review and resolve legal, financial, and technical issues raised by specific grants and grant reports.
• Produce high quality and timely materials for senior leadership and the Board, including quarterly Board docket materials, strategy documents, updates, dashboards, and other materials as needed.
Strategic and Field Leadership
• Organize foundation-sponsored convenings of grantees and field experts, including legal experts, advocates, movement leaders, and peer funders.
• Research, analyze, identify, and cultivate new opportunities for investment in the civil rights and racial justice landscape, translating into funding strategies.
• Integrate strategic communications and monitoring and evaluation into the portfolio's grantmaking strategies, maintaining a dynamic learning environment for grantees and staff where lessons learned are regularly synthesized and shared.
• Collaborate with key internal and external stakeholders to provide strategic leadership, identify gaps, and develop effective solutions across the field.
• Effectively represent the Foundation and the U.S. Racial Justice Initiative externally with credibility and clarity across a wide range of audiences, including meeting with current and potential grantees, giving presentations and attending public forums and conferences on topics of relevance, and when interacting with nonprofit, intergovernmental and private sector leaders, elected officials, academics, collaboratives and journalists.
• Contribute to broader field building efforts through writing, collaboration, and other forms of thought leadership.
DESIRED QUALIFICATIONS
While no one candidate will possess all the qualifications listed below, the ideal candidate will be passionate about The David and Lucile Packard Foundation's mission and bring many of the following skills and experiences.
Education and Experience
• A minimum of 7 years of experience working across core areas of the U.S. Racial Justice initiative, including civil rights, power building, racial equity, and social justice.
• A Bachelor's degree is required for this role; an advanced degree is strongly preferred.
WORK LOCATION, COMPENSATION & BENEFITS
The position is full-time. The salary range for this position is $200,000- $235,000 annually. This salary range is an estimate, and the actual salary may vary based on various factors, including without limitation individual education, experience, tenure, certification, skills, and abilities, as well as internal equity and alignment with market data. Offers are based on the candidate's years of experience and our practice of upholding salary equity within the foundation.
TO APPLY
More information about The Packard Foundation can be found at: https://www.packard.org/.
This search is being led by https://www.npag.com/rachel-burgoyne and https://www.npag.com/danielle-higa of the national talent search firm https://www.npag.com/. We invite applications with resume and cover letter outlining your interest and qualifications via the portal on NPAG's https://apptrkr.com/7148345.
The Packard Foundation is an equal employment opportunity employer, which means we recruit, hire, assign, train, promote, compensate, provide benefits, discipline, and discharge (and all the other terms and conditions of employmen...
Stories & Updates
Changing the conversation.Get the latest NAP news.
The Indigenous Tomorrows Fund: 2026 Grant Applications Open May 20!
Native Americans in Philanthropy, Newman’s Own Foundation, and Novo Nordisk are thrilled to announce the recipients of the 2025 Indigenous Tomorrows Fund (ITF) grants.
Native Youth Grantmakers at NAPCON26
The 2026 Native Youth Grantmakers (NYG) convened together for the first time on the homelands of our Coast Salish relatives. Beyond gaining new relatives and networking at every turn, the retreat’s agenda included courses in personal development, cultural grounding, and exploring each participant’s role as members of their respective communities and their new place within the philanthropic sector.
NAPCON26: Highlights From Our 2026 Annual Conference
Over three days in Riverside, California, Native leaders, funders, organizers, and community members gathered for the Native Americans in Philanthropy 2026 Annual Conference.
Native Youth Grantmakers in Seattle
The 2026 Native Youth Grantmakers (NYG) convened together for the first time on the homelands of our Coast Salish relatives. Beyond gaining new relatives and networking at every turn, the retreat’s agenda included courses in personal development, cultural grounding, and exploring each participant’s role as members of their respective communities and their new place within the philanthropic sector.
Native Americans in Philanthropy Announces Third Cohort of Native Youth Grantmakers
Native Americans in Philanthropy (NAP) is thrilled to announce the 2025-2026 Native Youth Grantmakers. These extraordinary and highly accomplished young individuals are the embodiment of passion, excellence, and a deep commitment to making a positive difference in their communities. As we welcome this new cohort, we celebrate their achievements, their futures, and their dedication to advancing Native-led philanthropy.
Standing Hand-in-Hand: Reflections on Reclamation, Partnership, and Possibility in Hawaiʻi
Native Hawaiian Philanthropy, Native Americans in Philanthropy, and Asian Americans/Pacific Islanders in Philanthropy came together for the Power in Solidarity: Hawaiʻi Funder Tour
It's Always A Good Day To Be Indigenous: How NAP Staff Honor Indigenous Peoples Day
This Indigenous Peoples Day, we are proud to center the voices of our staff—community leaders from across Indian Country—who share what this day means to them.
In Pilot Year, Youth-Led Indigenous Tomorrows Fund Awards $720K To 24 Orgs Advancing Community Wellbeing
Native Americans in Philanthropy, Newman’s Own Foundation, and Novo Nordisk are thrilled to announce the recipients of the 2025 Indigenous Tomorrows Fund (ITF) grants.
Elevating Indigenous Voices in the 21st Century Child Welfare Research Agenda
To truly transform child welfare practices and programs, it is essential that the perspectives of Indigenous peoples and Native-led organizations are prioritized.