Philanthropy & Funding
How Infrastructure Spending Can Help the Most Vulnerable Americans
Three areas where philanthropic funders can partner with government on infrastructure investments to advance equity in the United States.
Three areas where philanthropic funders can partner with government on infrastructure investments to advance equity in the United States.
Four ways philanthropy can effectively partner with governments to support equitable vaccination distribution and ensure that more individuals are vaccinated against COVID-19.
How governments can partner with philanthropy, nonprofits, and businesses to magnify their social impact over the next four years.
Inland regions are rapidly diversifying, and leaders of color in places like the Inland Empire need investment. Philanthropy needs a new playbook for this intersection of racial equity and regional equity.
If funders want to improve DEI in their organizations, they need to re-define risk, emphasize trust, and reflect the communities they serve.
We need to equip the next generation with the tools they need to deliver on good intentions.
Chinese and American philanthropists have more in common than one might think.
How nonprofit organizations can do a better job with their data.
Great ideas for social impact are dying on the vine because organizations lack the tools they need to grow. With the right strategies in place, any nonprofit can lay the foundation for success.
A new generation of wealth is making a difference using powerful technology, inventing new financial models to better leverage capital, and rigorously focusing on getting proven results.
Why the process of creating a theory of change matters, and a five-step guide to success.
An organization’s early-stage success has less to do with having a charismatic, lone visionary at the helm, and more to do with teamwork, metrics, and access to capital.
Why philanthropy needs to support more community-driven solutions, not just Ivy League ones.
How the next generation of funders and social entrepreneurs are already taking cues from tech to “hack” the world’s most pressing social problems.
Why we must leverage hands-on experience and service learning to encourage the next generation of social innovators.
How strategic use of social media, project-based donations, and peer-to-peer fundraising can build a base of millennial supporters.
Nonprofits should offer a wider range of opportunities for donating, facilitating network building, and embracing the complexity of the social problems.