Voice Up Grassroots Media & Civic Leadership Internship 100% Remote
National Grassroots Civic Leadership & Mental Health Internship
Voice Up Publishing, Inc.
Format: Remote (with optional local engagement)
Schedule: Flexible Compensation: Academic Credit or Volunteer
Contact:
About Voice Up
Voice Up Publishing, Inc. is a purpose-driven public health startup and grassroots movement focused on connecting people to purpose one conversation at a time. Grounded in doctoral research, Voice Up uses a human-centered approach to help individuals strengthen mental well-being and step into leadership within their communities.
In just over a year, Voice Up has built a global network, reached communities across 250+ institutions, and documented measurable improvements in mental health outcomes.
Internship Overview
This internship supports a new national model for local elections helping everyday people in any city run for office and lead with purpose.
Interns will work on real-world efforts to build grassroots campaigns that are simple, scalable, and rooted in community relationships. The model focuses on:
Small core teams (3 5 people)
Expanded community networks (10 20 people)
Consistent, coordinated action
Authentic, trust-based messaging
At its core:
Strong communities are built by people who show up.
Key Responsibilities
1. Local Campaign Activation
Support local candidates or emerging leaders
Help build and grow small, engaged teams
Assist with simple, repeatable campaign actions
2. Messaging & Storytelling
Translate real conversations into clear, relatable messaging
Support themes like leadership, responsibility, and community
Help create authentic content for public engagement
3. Digital Engagement & Coordination
Assist with social media and outreach strategies
Help organize weekly actions and content schedules
Support consistent communication across teams
4. Mental & Behavioral Health Integration
Connect campaign efforts to real community well-being needs
Support leaders focused on youth, families, and mental health
Align messaging with public health principles
5. Research & Documentation
Track what works across communities
Gather feedback and insights
Help build a scalable national model
Learning Outcomes
Interns will gain:
Experience in local civic engagement and grassroots organizing
Skills in communication, leadership, and strategy
Understanding of mental health’s role in community leadership
Experience applying research in real-world settings
Ability to turn ideas into action in their own city
Eligibility
Open to students, professionals, and community members from any background.
Relevant fields include: Public Health, Social Work, Psychology, Political Science, Communications, Education, Business, and Community Development.
No prior political experience required.
Ways to Participate
Academic Credit: Coordinate with your institution
Volunteer: Flexible, purpose-driven contribution
Voice Up University: Structured learning + applied experience
Structure
5 15 hours per week
Weekly virtual check-ins
Deliverables: Campaign support plan + community engagement summary
Why This Matters
Many communities need leaders who understand mental health and show up locally but potential leaders often lack support and structure.
This internship provides a simple, scalable way for anyone, in any city, to help build campaigns and strengthen their community.
How to Apply
Email with:
Name and background
Participation track
2 3 sentence statement of interest
Final Note
This is a national movement with local impact built one conversation, one team, and one city at a time.
But simplicity, in behavioral systems, is not a weakness. It is a design principle.
Across fields from habit science to cognitive psychology interventions that succeed over time tend to share three characteristics:
Low barrier to entry
High repeatability
Immediate experiential feedback
The B Curriculum, as described, aligns closely with this structure. Each practice is accessible. Each can be repeated daily. Each produces a tangible shift calm, connection, clarity that reinforces continued engagement.
This mirrors findings from contemporary research on micro-behaviors and habit loops, popularized by scholars like, who argue that lasting change is built not through large transformations, but through small, consistent actions embedded in daily life.