Is rural philanthropy being overlooked? Our September issue investigates how foundations are taking more thoughtful approaches, but total dollars continue to lag. Also, inside: ⭐ Grant makers are betting that a rural education program can scale ⭐ Native American group builds community wealth by giving to individuals ⭐ Why $20 million couldn't save an A.I. nonprofit ⭐ 10 ways to make the most of donor data ⭐ Opinion: What the Grateful Dead can teach nonprofits ⭐ and much more! Dive in! 👉 https://bit.ly/3zbGonk Not a subscriber yet? Sign up today. ▶️ https://bit.ly/3UN69ST ◀️
Über uns
The Chronicle of Philanthropy is the No. 1 news source, in print and online, for nonprofit leaders, fund raisers, grant makers, and other people involved in the philanthropic enterprise. For more than 20 years, The Chronicle has been connecting the nonprofit world with news, jobs, and ideas. In addition to its newspaper, which is published 18 times per year, The Chronicle provides comprehensive news, advice, and opinions through its Web site, Philanthropy.com. Philanthropy.com provides a vast array of free blogs, news stories, podcasts, and videos, along with a popular live discussions series that connects nonprofit professionals with experts in the field. Premium subscribers have access to extensive data about the nonprofit world, special reports, and articles from its archives. The Chronicle provides news and information for executives of tax-exempt organizations in health, education, religion, the arts, social services, and other fields, as well as fund raisers, professional employees of foundations, institutional investors, corporate grant makers, and charity donors. Along with news, it offers such service features as lists of grants, fundraising ideas and techniques, statistics, reports on tax and court rulings, summaries of books, and a calendar of events. It also provides a series of paid Webinars, which provide in-depth instruction on topics such as fundraising, social media, technology, and grant seeking.
- Website
-
http://www.philanthropy.com
External link for The Chronicle of Philanthropy
- Industrie
- Non-profit Organizations
- Größe des Unternehmens
- 51-200 Mitarbeiter
- Hauptsitz
- Washington, D.C.
- Typ
- Nonprofit
- Spezialitäten
- journalism, nonprofits, online, and webinars
Standorte
-
Primäre
1255 Twenty-Third St, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20037, US
Employees at The Chronicle of Philanthropy
-
George Anders
-
Chris Leighton
The Chronicle of Philanthropy | Director of Business Development
-
Ronald Barba
Branded Editorial @ The Chronicle of Higher Education | Former tech & business reporter. Ex-Google. Customer marketing, partner marketing, product…
-
Justin Moore
Sales Leader | Passionate Team Builder | Transformation Change Agent | Design Thinker | Coach
Aktualisierungen
-
Andrea Cristina Mercado, executive director of Florida Rising Together and the New Florida Majority Education Fund, will become president and CEO of the The Climate & Clean Energy Equity Fund, effective January 2. #transitions https://bit.ly/3ZnzvKd
-
🏛️ Join us for a riveting online #philforum where industry experts will delve into the ramifications of the Equal Rights v. Fearless Fund ruling, its impact on grants for people of color, and its journey through the courts. Hear from notable speakers including Marc Philpart, Dr. Carmen Rojas, Olivia N. Sedwick, and Thomas A. Saenz, as they share their insights on this pivotal topic. Register today! ⏳ https://bit.ly/4dZ11SV California Black Freedom Fund Marguerite Casey Foundation Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law MALDEF - Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund
-
Prior to this coalition, most donors tended to fund child care or workers rights or aging as discrete concerns. But the CARE Fund's grant-making strategy supported both core nonprofits advocating for the interests of mothers or childcare providers and the alliances between them. The care economy is in the spotlight this election season. Here’s how philanthropy shifted tactics to support coalitions across child care, home care, paid leave, and other causes. Eden Stiffman reports: https://bit.ly/4emSBEs
-
As we move inexorably — warily? — toward November 5, we look at the organizers, funders, lawyers, scholars, and writers who want to reboot our election system and change the fundamentals of how we vote. Election special: This is the first of two lists of nonprofit leaders to watch. Here, we look at the organizers, funders, lawyers, scholars, and writers who want to reboot our election system and change the fundamentals of how we vote. Funders and advocacy groups have long backed efforts to protect voting rights, educate and register voters, and limit money's influence in campaigns. But now comes a host of groups — many established since 2016 — that believe the election system itself is a cancer fueling polarization through gerrymandered districts, legislative gridlock, and contests in which the outcome is a foregone conclusion Read the full story by senior editor Drew Lindsay for #TheCommons: https://bit.ly/4dYvIax Who are the 17 leaders? Danielle Allen, Harvard University’s Allen Lab for Democracy Renovation (Harvard Ash Center for Democratic Governance and Innovation Ian Bassin, Protect Democracy George Cheung, More Equitable Democracy Todd Connor, Veterans for All Voters Lee Drutman, New America Adav Noti, Campaign Legal Center Rob Richie and Meredith Sumpter, FairVote Nathan Lockwood, Rank the Vote Joshua Graham Lynn, RepresentUs John Opdycke, Open Primaries Maria Perez and Grace Ramsey, Democracy Rising Miles Rapaport, 100% Democracy: An Initiative for Universal Voting Cynthia Richie Terrell, RepresentWomen Nick Troiano, Unite Us 🗓️ Coming up next: advocates who aim to build trust in elections.
-
Partners for Rural Impact helps leaders in rural towns and school districts identify programming gaps and tap into comprehensive educational, medical, and social services. After decades working in Appalachian Kentucky, the group is helping to spread its model to regions across the U.S. Eden Stiffman reports: https://bit.ly/47jiAdP
-
🇺🇲 Our latest Commons newsletter — an election special! 🇺🇲 We spotlight nonprofit leaders to watch as a small movement aims to upend the fundamentals of how we vote. NEXT WEEK: the leaders who want to build trust in elections. ➕ Plus ➕ --Rural America is hurting. Where’s philanthropy? --Next in our Commons in Conversation interview series: Are young elected officials the ones who will bring us together?
-
The Fearless Fund, which helped grow popular companies like beauty retailer thirteen lune and restaurant chain Slutty Vegan, has shut down its grant contest for Black women business owners in a legal settlement with a conservative group that claimed it was discriminatory. Read more: https://bit.ly/3ZgfkxQ
-
A new report sheds light on a troubling paradox in the nonprofit world: many workers dedicated to helping others are themselves struggling to make ends meet. The comprehensive study by Independent Sector and United for ALICE reveals that over one-fifth of nonprofit employees live in households that can't cover basic necessities like housing, food, and child care. Black and Hispanic workers, as well as employees with children at home, were much more likely to struggle financially, as were employees at nonprofits dedicated to certain causes like religion and social assistance. The findings bring up vital questions for a sector dedicated to doing good: How can leaders better support those who've chosen careers in nonprofits? What systemic changes are needed to ensure the financial stability of the sector's workforce? Sara Herschander reports: https://bit.ly/4egbuZD
-
Opinion: The Barr Foundation thought it had a perfect plan to modernize Boston’s bus system — until it faced unanticipated roadblocks, writes Lisa Jacobson. https://bit.ly/47lJXDY Jacobson is the senior program officer for mobility at the Barr Foundation.