Making the Money Work
How funders can best support place-based initiatives.
Innovative ideas for donors, foundation leaders, and philanthropists (more)
How funders can best support place-based initiatives.
A case for using targeted measures of progress in philanthropy.
The case for investing in the long-term health and well-being of communities, based on what those communities value.
Philanthropists must support big, difficult, and politically sensitive issues that government, nonprofits, multilateral organizations, and other actors are unable or unwilling to address.
These groups' perspectives are closer than most think—and it’s good news for philanthropy.
Are traditional assumptions about how we “do” philanthropy preventing us from finding new and better ways of working?
Three ways to create an environment where interdependent stakeholders can perform their individual roles optimally and collaborate with each other effectively.
If we want the nonprofit sector to innovate, we need to acknowledge the gender gap between nonprofits and the private sector.
The nonprofit funding process lacks transparency and fosters insecurity—and only funders can fix it.
No-strings-attached prizes incentivize innovation, but private foundations need to structure them carefully to avoid prohibitive penalty taxes.