Noor, ZeeshanWasif, RafeelSiddiqui, ShariqKhan, Sabith2023-04-122023-04-122022Noor Z, Wasif R, Siddiqui S, Khan S. Racialized minorities, trust, and crisis: Muslim-American nonprofits, their leadership and government relations during COVID-19. Nonprofit Manag Leadersh. 2022;32(3):341-364. doi:10.1002/nml.21486https://hdl.handle.net/1805/32360This article is made available for unrestricted research re-use and secondary analysis in any form or be any means with acknowledgement of the original source. These permissions are granted for the duration of the World Health Organization (WHO) declaration of COVID-19 as a global pandemic.The COVID‐19 pandemic disproportionately affects already‐vulnerable minorities, highlighting the need for strong, trusting relationships between governments and minority nonprofits for everyone's benefit. The current scholarship suggests minority members often lack trust in government. This study contributes to the field by examining trust levels Muslim‐American nonprofits have for federal, state, and local government. Nearly two‐thirds (65%) of Muslim nonprofit leaders believe that they may be discriminated against in the award of CARES Act funding, but on racial rather than religious ones. Moreover, partisanship affects trust levels. Muslim nonprofits in Republican “red” states show less trust in government compared with those in Democratic “blue” states. This study finds evidence that past relationships with the government strengthen trust. Past awards of government grants correlated positively with higher trust at both federal and local levels.en-USPublic Health EmergencyCARES ActCOVID‐19GovernmentLeadershipMuslimsNonprofitsTrustRacialized minorities, trust, and crisis: Muslim- American nonprofits, their leadership and government relations during COVID-19Article