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OverviewIn Effective Philanthropy, Mary Ellen Capek and Molly Mead offer strategies for strengthening organizations through a commitment to diversity and gender equality. Capek and Mead's research shows that institutionalizing a more nuanced understanding of what they call ""deep diversity"" allows organizations to make full use of all the resources they have available, both inside and outside their doors. The authors show how foundations have used ""differences that divide us""—race, class, gender, sexual orientation, geography, age, religion, physical ability, and others—to become learning organizations, a proven strategy for organizational effectiveness. By virtue of their ""power of the purse"" and more subtle forms of influence, foundations are key players in US social, economic, and public policy and are increasingly influential internationally. When foundations function effectively, there is potential for tremendous public benefit, and Capek and Mead argue that goals for equity in philanthropy are similar to goals for any effective organization. Offering demographics, case studies, strategic funding initiatives, theoretical analyses, and original research, Effective Philanthropy describes models for building effective foundations that can be applied to all kinds of institutions—large and small, public and private, national and regional, bureaucratic and entrepreneurial—including colleges and universities, nonprofits, government agencies, and multinational corporations.The diverse case studies and funding initiatives highlighted in the book include California Wellness, the Otto Bremer Foundation, the Philadelphia Foundation, the Ms. Foundation for Women's Collaborative Fund for Women's Economic Development, and programs for women and girls funded by the United Way of Massachusetts Bay. Supported by the W. K. Kellogg Foundation and Women & Philanthropy. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Mary Ellen S. Capek , Molly MeadPublisher: MIT Press Ltd Imprint: MIT Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.544kg ISBN: 9780262532969ISBN 10: 0262532964 Pages: 424 Publication Date: 24 August 2007 Recommended Age: From 18 years Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsThis is the strongest and best-organized argument I have seen for placing gender front and center in all considerations of diversity, for including the female half of humanity in policy decisions, for removing gender from 'special interest' analysis, and for funding women and girls. - Mark Dowie, author of American Foundations: An Investigative History Altogether, the book is creative, innovative, and in many ways unique. - Teresa Odendahl, author of Charity Begins at Home: Generosity and Self-Interest among the Philanthropic Elite ""This book brings new research to bear on an important topic: philanthropic work related to women and girls, and how deep diversity is a critical next step to achieving a higher level of effectiveness. Moving beyond merely identifying the problem, it provides real examples of strategies and approaches that organizations have taken to address it.""--Louis Delgado, Graduate Program Director, Philanthropy & Nonprofit Sector Program, Loyola University ChicagoPlease note: Endorser gives permission to excerpt from quote. ""Both provocative and judicious, Meyer's book makes a most welcome and valuable contribution to current debates about environmentalist political theory and practice.""--Terence Ball, Arizona State University, author of Reappraising Political Theory ""In American Foundations, Mark Dowie cogently describes, examines, and critiques the functions, roles, and structures of foundations in America, their idiosyncracies in both failures and successes. He offers a short history of the field and launches into balanced appraisals of foundations' contributions to education, science, health, the environment, food production, energy, the arts, civil society, imagination, democracy, and investments. He argues that foundations have had considerable influence in the past and are increasingly important today as the government cuts back. All in all, an excellent book."" --Teresa Odendahl, author of *Charity Begins at Home: Generosity and Self-Interest Among the Philanthropic Elite* ""This book will be significant in bringing the need for diversity and democratic grantmaking practices front and center. The scholarship is groundbreaking and thorough. Altogether, the book is creative, innovative, and in many ways unique."" Teresa Odendahl , author of Charity Begins at Home: Generosity and Self-Interest among the Philanthropic Elite ""This book will be significant in bringing the need for diversity and democractic grantmaking practices front and center. The scholarship is groundbreaking and thorough. Altogether, the book is creative, innovative, and in many ways unique.""--Teresa Odendahl, author of *Charity Begins at Home: Generosity and Self-Interest Among the Philanthropic Elite*Please note: Endorser gives permission to excerpt from quote. This book brings new research to bear on an important topic: philanthropic work related to women and girls, and how deep diversity is a critical next step to achieving a higher level of effectiveness. Moving beyond merely identifying the problem, it provides real examples of strategies and approaches that organizations have taken to address it. --Louis Delgado, Graduate Program Director, Philanthropy & Nonprofit Sector Program, Loyola University ChicagoPlease note: Endorser gives permission to excerpt from quote. Both provocative and judicious, Meyer's book makes a most welcome and valuable contribution to current debates about environmentalist political theory and practice. --Terence Ball, Arizona State University, author of Reappraising Political Theory In American Foundations, Mark Dowie cogently describes, examines, and critiques the functions, roles, and structures of foundations in America, their idiosyncracies in both failures and successes. He offers a short history of the field and launches into balanced appraisals of foundations' contributions to education, science, health, the environment, food production, energy, the arts, civil society, imagination, democracy, and investments. He argues that foundations have had considerable influence in the past and are increasingly important today as the government cuts back. All in all, an excellent book. --Teresa Odendahl, author of *Charity Begins at Home: Generosity and Self-Interest Among the Philanthropic Elite* This book will be significant in bringing the need for diversity and democratic grantmaking practices front and center. The scholarship is groundbreaking and thorough. Altogether, the book is creative, innovative, and in many ways unique. Teresa Odendahl , author of Charity Begins at Home: Generosity and Self-Interest among the Philanthropic Elite This book will be significant in bringing the need for diversity and democractic grantmaking practices front and center. The scholarship is groundbreaking and thorough. Altogether, the book is creative, innovative, and in many ways unique. --Teresa Odendahl, author of *Charity Begins at Home: Generosity and Self-Interest Among the Philanthropic Elite*Please note: Endorser gives permission to excerpt from quote. Author InformationMary Ellen S. Capek is a Principal in Capek & Associates, a philanthropic and nonprofit research and consulting group based in Corrales, New Mexico, and a Visiting Scholar at the Anderson Schools of Management at the University of New Mexico. Molly Mead is Lincoln Filene Professor at the University College of Citizenship and Public Service at Tufts University. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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