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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.

February 6, 2025
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From: Philanthropy Today — The Commons Weekly

Subject: Essay: How Charities Stereotype the People They Serve

Visit The Commons for our latest content, sign up for The Commons LinkedIn newsletter.

From senior editor Drew Lindsay: Journalist Bobbi Dempsey covers nonprofits and often writes about poverty and the people affected by it. And what she has found confirms what she learned as a child growing up in poverty: that families in need often have to put on a performance to prove that they are “poor enough” to deserve charitable assistance.

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Visit The Commons for our latest content, sign up for The Commons LinkedIn newsletter.

From senior editor Drew Lindsay: Journalist Bobbi Dempsey covers nonprofits and often writes about poverty and the people affected by it. And what she has found confirms what she learned as a child growing up in poverty: that families in need often have to put on a performance to prove that they are “poor enough” to deserve charitable assistance.

In a personal essay this week in The Commons, she writes of her childhood with her mom, a divorced mother of four struggling to make ends meet. At food banks and other safety-net groups, they often faced more suspicion than kindness. “While I knew that our poverty was often viewed by society as a byproduct of laziness, these encounters were different,” Dempsey writes. “The nonprofits — charitable groups committed to helping me and others like me — judged us for looking not quite poor enough.”

In her essay, she explores solutions that include creating a culture of empathy at nonprofits.

We’re grateful for the opportunity to bring you Dempsey’s piece through a partnership with the Economic Hardship Reporting Project, a nonprofit that supports independent journalists writing about economic inequality.

From The Commons

  • Bobbi Dempsey, around 4 years old, at center, with her 6-year-old brother Joey on a playground near their childhood home in northeast Pennsylvania.
    Personal Essay

    I Grew Up Poor and Learned Early: Charities Aren’t Always So Charitable

    By Bobbi Dempsey
    As a young girl, the author found nonprofits often stereotyped her family. Now, as a journalist, she reports on how they can do better.
SM 1200x1200 Interviewee_a (1).png

Upcoming Events: Has the Election Brought Us Closer?

GOP pollster and CNN contributor Kristen Soltis Anderson has some counterintuitive post-election findings: that the country is in a moment where we could restore trust in institutions, including nonprofits and grant makers. I invite you to join me for a conversation about Anderson’s findings on Thursday, February 20, at 12:30 p.m. ET, when she visits The Commons in Conversation. We’ll also talk about her surveys that suggest philanthropy has an important role to play in closing America’s divides.

⭐ The event is free on LinkedIn with registration. ⭐

Of the Moment

News and other noteworthy items:

  • LinkedIn co-founder and philanthropist Reid Hoffman joins Lever for Change for a podcast to discuss his $10 million open call to expand an effort to build and restore public trust in the country’s core institutions — in government, the media, public health, higher education, and more. “The breadth of possibilities is quite large,” Hoffman says. “I’m looking for that startlingly great lever that could make a real difference.” The Trust in American Institutions challenge launched in December and will close registration February 19 and applications March 19.
  • In USA Today, Hali Lee, co-founder of theDonors of Color Network, argues that small-scale organizing and giving circles will be more effective fighting the Trump administration agenda than mass marches like the Women’s March following the president’s 2016 inauguration. “We need fewer pink hats and more kitchen tables,” Lee writes.
  • What might heal our divides and tamp down hate-filled violence? “Big citizenship,” or large-scale national service, write John Bridgeland and Alan Khazei in the Washington Post. Noting that Democrats and President Trump and Vice President Vance have endorsed national service, they argue a scaled-up effort could ”reignite a revolution of service and ingenuity to help solve our public challenges [and] bring Americans of all backgrounds together.” Bridgeland is a former director of the White House Domestic Policy Council under President George W. Bush, and Khazei is a co-founder of the education nonprofit City Year.
  • The Council on Foundations is out with a report examining five efforts to bring Americans together and navigate divides. The report looks at each project’s theories of change, the work, and the measurements of impact. Case studies include Resetting the Table’s work in Buffalo following the 2022 mass shooting at a grocery store in a Black community and the Trust for Public Land’s initiative to help park directors and community organizations design programs to build connections and relationships among visitors from different backgrounds.

Webinars

  • 022725_the psychology of thanking_V2_COP_newsletter_Plain.jpg

    Today: Thursday, February 27 at 2 p.m. ET | Register Now

    December 19, 2024
    Crafting donor thank-yous that deepen ties with supporters requires more than strong writing skills; it takes an understanding of donor motivations. Join us for The Psychology of Thanking Donors Well to learn about new research into what makes donors feel valued. Our speakers will explain how to analyze your donor communications, use language that resonates with donors, and increase giving to your cause by taking your thank-yous to the next level.

Editor's Picks

  • On the left, Tycely Williams’ grandparents, Lucille and R.J. Anderson, her mother, Jerona Anderson, and uncle, Raymond Anderson, are seen in 1963 receiving the county’s Farmers Association “Family of the Year” award at Wilkinson High School in Orangeburg, S.C.
On the right, Tycely Williams with her niece Emma Reid at a family reunion in 2016, at Shiloh A.M.E. Browning Branch Cemetery in Elloree, S.C.
    Essay

    ‘While I Breathe, I Hope': A Black Nonprofit Leader and Daughter of the South Returns Home

    By Tycely Williams
    A veteran fundraiser takes up a new job as CEO and pursues the American ideals that she, her family, and generations of Black philanthropists hold dear.
  • Whitney Weathers speaks with colleagues in a meeting at UpStart.
    Essay

    My Journey as a Black Christian DEI Leader at a Jewish Nonprofit

    By Whitney Weathers
    Her colleagues gave the author a new understanding of diversity, equity, and inclusion. After the October 7 Hamas attack on Israel, it was her perspective of allyship that changed.
  • WILKESBORO, NC - MARCH 4: L.B. Prevette poses for a portrait near the outdoor bar at Merle’s, a cocktail lounge she co-owns in downtown Wilkesboro, NC on March 4, 2024.   (Logan Cyrus for The Chronicle)
    Grassroots

    What Philanthropy Elites Can Learn From Appalachia

    By Drew Lindsay
    “We’ve got to stop hyperintellectualizing things,” says L.B. Prevette, a North Carolina leader of a program founded by New York Times columnist David Brooks to build community.
The Commons
Drew Lindsay
Drew is a longtime magazine writer and editor who joined the Chronicle of Philanthropy in 2014.
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