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Reimagining Funder Accountability
Funders often mistake accountability for compliance. Instead, accountability must be rooted in mutuality, relationships, and power analysis.
Funders often mistake accountability for compliance. Instead, accountability must be rooted in mutuality, relationships, and power analysis.
Instead of mirroring corporate practices, trust-based philanthropy listens to what communities want and need.
Rest and joy are essential to not only leaders but their teams, their organizations, and the communities they serve.
Funders must commit to making our institutions sites of trust and relationship-building for our grantee partners to realize their mission.
The practices of trust-based philanthropy require grappling with deep-rooted inequities while living values in action.
The United States and other industrialized countries can learn from experiments in the developing world that use the humble cell phone as a platform for innovation.
How Shared Hope International uses digital tools and meaningful grassroots experiences to activate support.
Addressing today’s most pressing challenges requires developing the capacity to lead collaboratively and to effectively work across sectors.
Achieving diversity, equity, and inclusion means putting disability justice in every policy discussion and making it part of the continuing struggle for civil rights.