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Philanthropy Today

A free email with news, trends, and opinion articles about the nonprofit world, as well as links to our tools, resources, and webinars. Delivered every weekday. Philanthropy Today subscribers also get a bonus weekly email called Philanthropy Today — The Commons, about how America’s nonprofits and foundations are working to heal the nation’s divides.

May 9, 2024
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From: Philanthropy Today — The Commons Weekly

Subject: Breaking a Fundraising Taboo — and Having a Laugh

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This Week in The Commons

  • Charity:water breaks a fundraising taboo to unite its followers
  • Melinda French Gates’s philanthropy chief on women’s power (from The Commons launch)
  • How pro-democracy philanthropy is flying blind
  • A new, celebrity-packed anti-polarization coalition
Commons_LindsayCharityWater_flowchart-still.jpg

A Fundraising Gambit

From senior editor Drew Lindsay: A fundraising email from Charity:water landed in my inbox recently with the subject line: “Whose side are you on anyway?” — an odd question given that the international-relief group’s donors, like every organization’s, are divided over Israel-Gaza, Trump-Biden, and many other demarcation lines. I called Ben Greene, the organization’s top fundraiser, to ask why he was playing with matches when America feels like a tinderbox.

To be sure, Charity:water leavened this heavy topic with an interactive quiz that poked fun at our fights over things like whether pineapple belongs on pizza. But Ben said the digital campaign had a serious purpose: to point to the country’s divisions as a contrast to how the organization’s work can bring people together.

  • Read about the campaign’s results in “Charity:water Breaks a Fundraiser Taboo and Talks About Division — Sort Of.”
Melinda Gates in Kirkland, Wash., in 2018.
AP Photo/Ted S. Warren

The French Gates Blueprint for Change

My colleagues this week reported that Melinda French Gates is getting $12.5 billion as she exits the Gates Foundation, which she helped create. What’s her plan for that money? The Commons got an insider’s preview in an essay last month by Brooke D. Anderson, head of French Gates’s Pivotal Ventures and a former top U.S. diplomat. Anderson argued that expanding the influence of women is vital to virtually every issue philanthropy is tackling.

  • Read Anderson’s essay: “Put Women in the Rooms Where It Happens”

Why Philanthropy Is Flying Blind

Countless pro-democracy organizations and programs have launched in recent years, with grants more than tripling, according to Andrew Seligsohn, head of Public Agenda, a research and public engagement group. But how do foundations know if these initiatives are working?

The short answer: They don’t. That’s a problem, Seligsohn says, and he offers a plan for what to do.

  • Read his essay: “Which Pro-Democracy Initiatives Work? Philanthropy Has No Idea”

A New Set of Builders

This week saw the launch of a high-profile coalition to reduce polarization. Called Builders, it includes entrepreneur and philanthropist Daniel Lubetzky, actor Liev Schreiber, journalist Katie Couric, and director of the Muhammad Ali Center, Lonnie Ali. “Extremists get up every morning with the intention of furthering their cause, and they are driven to divide and destroy,” Ali said. “We need to channel that same energy, but to unite and build.”

  • Read our report: “New Builders Initiative Looks to Fight Polarization by Encouraging Collaboration and Alliances”

Of the Moment

Noteworthy news and items:

  • Read: In an interview with writer and activist Anand Giridharadas, Heather McGhee — author of The Sum of Us and former president of Demos, the racial justice and democracy group — makes the case for reparations. “It’s so important for our democracy for everyone to know that they live in a society where when government harms you, they make it right.”
  • Watch: ABC’s Good Morning America profiles the American Exchange Project, a nonprofit that aims to bridge divides through an exchange program in which high schoolers from vastly different parts of the country trade places.

Editor's Picks

  • news-danielspressforward-155908830
    Journalism

    After Shaky Start, Philanthropy Coalition’s $500 Million Local News Effort Takes Shape

    By Alex Daniels April 25, 2024
    The long-awaited Press Forward initiative, led by the MacArthur and Knight foundations, focuses on small newsrooms that have been reeling from financial pressures.
  • Boston, MA: Boston City Councilor Julia Mejia signs a petition in support of the Fair Share Amendment Campaign during a rally at the back entrance of the Bruce C. Bolling Municipal Building in Boston on June 21, 2021. (Matthew J. Lee, The Boston Globe, Getty Images)
    Opinion

    How Nonprofits Lose Out When Volunteer Advocates Are Asked to Do Little Real Advocacy

    By Sam Daley-Harris May 2, 2024
    Nonprofits worried about their brand are asking supporters to do little more than sign petitions and write checks. They should be helping them become effective citizen-advocates.
  • The silhouette of the U.S. Capitol building in Washington, D.C. Photographer: Stefani Reynolds, Bloomberg
    Opinion

    Charitable Donors Operating in the Shadows Push Our Politics to the Extremes

    By Daniel Stid May 2, 2024
    Grant makers on the left and right finance a network of activists and advocates whose all-or-nothing, combative stances keep the political parties tethered to the poles.
The Commons
Drew Lindsay
Drew is a longtime magazine writer and editor who joined the Chronicle of Philanthropy in 2014.
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