May 19, 2026
Civil Strategies Introduces The CIVIL Institutional Assessment™
May 19, 2026
For Immediate Release
Contact: Civil Strategies
657-777-8490
Civil Strategies Introduces The CIVIL Institutional Assessment™
An institutional diagnostic, based on The CIVIL Framework™, designed for nonprofit and philanthropic organizations navigating federal disruption, financial uncertainty, and rising public demand
PORTLAND, OR. – Civil Strategies today announced the launch of the CIVIL Institutional Assessment™, a structured institutional diagnostic designed to help nonprofit, philanthropic, and civic organizations understand whether their internal design is capable of carrying the conditions they now face.
The launch comes at a moment of growing strain across the nonprofit sector. Federal funding freezes, grant terminations, executive actions targeting civic institutions, and rising demand for services have exposed structural pressures that many organizations were never built to absorb.
According to new research released this week by the Center for Effective Philanthropy, 73 percent of nonprofits report increased demand for services while facing escalating financial and operational uncertainty.
“The institutions doing some of the most consequential work in civic life are being asked to hold more than their current design was built for,” said Midy Aponte-Vargas, Founder and CEO of Civil Strategies. “This Assessment was created to help leaders see that gap clearly, understand where it lives inside the institution, and determine what it would take to close it.”
Grounded in The CIVIL Framework™ and informed by the firm’s April 2026 publication Built to Hold: A Methodology for Institutional Stewardship in a Changed Civic Landscape, the Assessment evaluates how institutional functions operate independently and together under pressure.
Rather than focusing only on strategy or performance, the Assessment examines whether an institution’s underlying systems, governance structures, leadership design, financial architecture, and operational capacity are aligned with what the organization is now being asked to sustain.
The CIVIL Institutional Assessment™ examines eight core institutional functions:
- Governance: Decision-making structures, authority, oversight, and institutional accountability
- Finance: Financial sustainability, budgeting practices, and fiscal resilience
- Revenue Development: Funding composition, diversification, and long-term viability
- Programs: Alignment between mission, delivery, measurement, and institutional structure
- Operations: Reliability and scalability of internal systems and workflows
- Communications: Strategic clarity and alignment across internal and external communications
- People and Culture: Leadership continuity, staff sustainability, and organizational health
- Risk and Resilience: Institutional readiness for disruption, uncertainty, and change
Civil notes that the most significant institutional vulnerabilities rarely exist inside a single department or function. They emerge at the intersections. Where governance affects financial sustainability, where program growth outpaces operational capacity, or where communications commitments exceed what leadership structures can realistically support.
“These institutions are not failing,” Aponte-Vargas said. “Many are operating with extraordinary commitment under conditions the sector has not faced in generations. What leaders need right now is not another surface-level assessment. They need a rigorous understanding of how their institution actually functions under pressure.”
The Assessment is designed for nonprofit, philanthropic, and civic institutions navigating growth, leadership transition, financial uncertainty, or increased public responsibility. It is also intended to support funders and philanthropic partners seeking a clearer understanding of institutional conditions and investment needs.
Civil describes the Assessment as part of a broader shift away from viewing institutional challenges as isolated operational problems and toward understanding them as questions of institutional design, stewardship, and long-term sustainability.
“The conditions facing nonprofit and civic institutions are no longer episodic disruptions. They are reshaping the environment these organizations must operate within,” said Aponte-Vargas. “Funders have an opportunity to help organizations not only navigate this moment, but redesign the systems, structures, and internal capacity needed for the civic landscape that is emerging before us.”
About Civil Strategies
Civil Strategies is a national institutional design and strategic advisory firm focused on how institutions operate in practice. The firm integrates business, communications, finance, policy, and risk management into a single advisory practice, designing for coherence through The CIVIL Framework™ so that what organizations stand for is reflected in how they operate, in decisions, structures, and everyday practice.
For more information, visit civil-strategies.com or email contact@civil-strategies.com.
