Advancing Upstream: Philanthropy's Aspirations for Social Justice

abstract: This study explores how grantmakers conceptualize their work with respect to issues of social justice. It seeks to answer two primary questions: What role, if any, does the philanthropic community ascribe to itself in not just ameliorating but helping solve our greatest social challenges?...

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Other Authors: Lester, Eva Lorraine (Author)
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.9096
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-90962018-06-22T03:01:43Z Advancing Upstream: Philanthropy's Aspirations for Social Justice abstract: This study explores how grantmakers conceptualize their work with respect to issues of social justice. It seeks to answer two primary questions: What role, if any, does the philanthropic community ascribe to itself in not just ameliorating but helping solve our greatest social challenges? And if philanthropy does see itself as an agent of change, what are the barriers that limit its potential? After painting a portrait of contemporary American philanthropy, this paper applies Iris Marion Young's critique of distributive justice to philanthropy's dilemma between downstream charitable aid and upstream structural change. The thesis then turns to analysis of semi-structured interviews with eighteen of Arizona's foundation leaders to assess whether and how state-level philanthropic leaders see their work vis-á -vis social justice, and understand how external factors limit philanthropy's ability to effect maximum social change. Participants express a desire to engage in genuinely meaningful philanthropy which does more than just maintain the status quo, but identify multiple constraints, including legal barriers to fully utilizing advocacy as a tool, governmental infringement on philanthropic autonomy, the channeling of philanthropic resources toward basic needs as a result of the recession, and a grantmaking orientation that prioritizes short term programs that yield swift, measurable results as opposed to longer term efforts. Dissertation/Thesis Lester, Eva Lorraine (Author) Zatz, Marjorie S (Advisor) Haglund, Ladawn (Committee member) Romero, Mary (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Social Research Sociology Public Policy and Social Welfare Charity Foundations Philanthropy Social Change Social Justice Structural Change eng 199 pages M.S. Justice Studies 2011 Masters Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.9096 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2011
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Social Research
Sociology
Public Policy and Social Welfare
Charity
Foundations
Philanthropy
Social Change
Social Justice
Structural Change
spellingShingle Social Research
Sociology
Public Policy and Social Welfare
Charity
Foundations
Philanthropy
Social Change
Social Justice
Structural Change
Advancing Upstream: Philanthropy's Aspirations for Social Justice
description abstract: This study explores how grantmakers conceptualize their work with respect to issues of social justice. It seeks to answer two primary questions: What role, if any, does the philanthropic community ascribe to itself in not just ameliorating but helping solve our greatest social challenges? And if philanthropy does see itself as an agent of change, what are the barriers that limit its potential? After painting a portrait of contemporary American philanthropy, this paper applies Iris Marion Young's critique of distributive justice to philanthropy's dilemma between downstream charitable aid and upstream structural change. The thesis then turns to analysis of semi-structured interviews with eighteen of Arizona's foundation leaders to assess whether and how state-level philanthropic leaders see their work vis-á -vis social justice, and understand how external factors limit philanthropy's ability to effect maximum social change. Participants express a desire to engage in genuinely meaningful philanthropy which does more than just maintain the status quo, but identify multiple constraints, including legal barriers to fully utilizing advocacy as a tool, governmental infringement on philanthropic autonomy, the channeling of philanthropic resources toward basic needs as a result of the recession, and a grantmaking orientation that prioritizes short term programs that yield swift, measurable results as opposed to longer term efforts. === Dissertation/Thesis === M.S. Justice Studies 2011
author2 Lester, Eva Lorraine (Author)
author_facet Lester, Eva Lorraine (Author)
title Advancing Upstream: Philanthropy's Aspirations for Social Justice
title_short Advancing Upstream: Philanthropy's Aspirations for Social Justice
title_full Advancing Upstream: Philanthropy's Aspirations for Social Justice
title_fullStr Advancing Upstream: Philanthropy's Aspirations for Social Justice
title_full_unstemmed Advancing Upstream: Philanthropy's Aspirations for Social Justice
title_sort advancing upstream: philanthropy's aspirations for social justice
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.9096
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