This week I’ll be discussing an article that was published on “Dialogues on Civic Philanthropy”, http://www.civicphilanthropy.net/. Rick Cohen, the former Executive Director of the National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy, posted an opinion piece on that website entitled What Can and Should Philanthropy Do in the Future? This is the THIRD in a series of posts on Cohen’s article.
Foundations Should Listen to Those Most Affected by the Challenges of our Society and Let Them Weigh In on the Solutions.
What Cohen is really advocating is the democratization of foundation philanthropy. He is urging foundations to stay open, above all to listen, to the nonprofits at the forefront of the biggest societal problems in the service area. This can’t help but grow the foundation’s understanding of critical community needs and inform it’s grant making accordingly.
Funding grassroots organizations gives voice and power to our diverse community. Without community input on community problems, donors to foundations will have turned over responsibility for helping to meet community needs to what Cohen calls the “philanthropic philosopher kings and queens” of the foundation world.
In this segment of his opinion piece, Cohen is focusing on the question of who. Who is most knowledgeable of critical community needs? It is of course the people most challenged by them and the grassroots nonprofits that help address them.
Wednesday, November 11, 2009
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