Philanthropy & Funding
Building the Refugee Economy
As humanitarian aid agencies buckle under the collapse of financial support, the private sector must step in to invest in refugees and integrate them into the economy.
Two recent books explore the modern prominence of the global financial-inclusion agenda and argue about how it got there.
As humanitarian aid agencies buckle under the collapse of financial support, the private sector must step in to invest in refugees and integrate them into the economy.
Preparing young people to participate and govern means moving beyond entrusting civic learning to a single course in high school or an elective on campus.
We judge philanthropic capital's impact by what it builds while it is building. We should judge by what stands, without it, after the grant has ended.
The New Gilded Age: Unlike yesterday’s magnates, today’s billionaires prefer to write checks to existing organizations. They should instead build institutions that last.
Many social impact leaders feel pressure to engage with AI but are overwhelmed and lack a clear starting point. Four fundamental questions can help frame early conversations.
An Indian state's initiative to establish women-run community libraries is giving rural students—especially girls—a safe space to study and access career guidance.
A small foundation that eschews perpetuity in favor of maximizing social impact can continue to sustain and scale long after its doors close.
Funders need to identify, embrace, and ultimately demystify compliance, reclaiming it as a tool that enables, rather than impedes, philanthropy’s essential purpose.
A conversation with two nationally renowned school superintendents about the biggest challenges they face, the relationship between education and democracy, and the tension between innovation and equity.
What SSIR readers are saying about articles on artificial intelligence, charitable giving, and navigating organizational disagreement.
Inter-nursing home games in France happen regularly across the country thanks in part to financial support from the National Solidarity Fund for Autonomy, an arm of the country’s social-security system.
We all—editors, writers, and readers alike—are not just students or observers of the world around us but builders of its future.
Impact strategies must reckon with the problem that capital is frequently trapped in highly illiquid investments with no prospect of exit.
There is philanthropic investing, and there is commercial investing, and there is nothing in between.
The problems are big, the time is short, and the resources are limited.
In the face of current funding uncertainty, US nonprofits must innovate to sustain their missions.
As AI begins to transform education, work, and social life, we need to focus on developing and expanding capacities essential for human flourishing.
A final sweep of 60 years of evidence reveals durable truths about how development succeeds and fails.