Burnout prevention in the non-profit sector requires systemic organisational responses rather than individual coping alone. This article outlines core strategies for embedding resilience within structures, cultures, and leadership practices. It explores trauma-informed workplace design, role clarity and supervision, recognition systems, equitable workload distribution, flexible arrangements, and dedicated wellbeing resources. Trauma-informed cultures foster safety, trust, and reflection, while clear roles and consistent recognition counteract invisibility and ambiguity. Equitable workloads and flexible practices sustain engagement and retention, particularly in resource-constrained contexts. Finally, allocating funds for counselling, resilience training, and psychosocial support formalises wellbeing as a governance responsibility. By integrating these strategies, non-profits shift the focus from personal endurance to institutional accountability, aligning internal culture with their external missions of care and justice.
Anna Neya Kazanskaia (Wed,) studied this question.
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