Grant Makers Can Improve Government Effectiveness in the Covid-19 Era
Ensuring that governments reduce corruption, adopt good policy, and get citizens involved in policy making is critical to creating a strong response to this crisis and its aftermath.
Congress Should Force Foundations and Donor-Advised Funds to Give More Now
Assets of grant makers grew 200 percent in the last decade so they can afford to increase the share of their endowments that go to charities — and they can do that without borrowing money from the public by floating bonds, says a member of the Patriotic Millionaires.
Who Benefits When Foundations Float Bonds to Do More Grant Making?
An unprecedented move by Ford and other foundations to issue debt could have led to a different outcome, one that might have done more to help women, people of color, and others too often left behind, says the senior economics correspondent of “Next City.”
How Colleges and Foundations Can Lead the Way on Reparations for Enslaved People
A handful of colleges have taken action to repay family members of the Black Americans who were forced to build campuses in antebellum America. If grant makers, big donors, alumni, and others joined forces, we might create a model that will spread nationwide, writes a founder of a project at Georgetown U. that identifies slave descendants.
More than ever, foundation and nonprofit leaders need to listen to the people they serve and develop a more open and participatory approach to communications efforts.
Coronavirus Diary: What Keeps a Disaster-Preparedness Leader Awake at Night
Nicolette Louissaint is executive director of Healthcare Ready, a nonprofit that helps coordinate the efforts of health care companies, governments, and community organizations during disasters. She spoke to the Chronicle about disaster preparedness and what the last three months have taught her as a nonprofit leader.
Editor’s Notebook: A Renewed Quest For Racial Equity
Nonprofits and foundations are grappling with critical questions of diversity and racial equity. A look inside the Chronicle’s July 2020 issue.
Grant makers and other donors must continue to invest in community groups that help young undocumented immigrants work and study in the United States, while also supporting advocates seeking long-term solutions to the dangerous obstacles facing immigrants today.
For Philanthropy to Achieve Its Goals, Democracy Must Work
Grant makers give less than 2 percent of their dollars annually to strengthening civic participation and government. Let’s turn that around and reinvent our democracy to serve everyone.
How to Avoid Excuses That Prevent Grant Makers From Aiding Black-Led Organizations
The notion persists that investing in grassroots organizations headed by people of color is inherently risky. Here are five ways to challenge that thinking from two experts on nonprofit finance.