The July 2024 issue is out! Fundraisers, this issue is for you. Our cover story by Ben Gose and Rasheeda Childress looks at how everyday donors are feeling overlooked as an overreliance on big donors evolved during the pandemic. Also in this issue: - How the Fearless Fund Ruling Distorts Charity, History — and Law - Giving Continues Its Decline. Can Fundraisers Turn the Tide in 2024? - Tips to Reach More Small-Dollar Donors - How 3 Charities Are Trying to Attract Everyday Donors - An Award That Honors Master Craftspeople - Civil Rights Are Under Siege. DEI 2.0 Is the Answer - and more! Read the issue online 👉 https://bit.ly/4aNOyz6 Not a subscriber yet? 🌟 Sign up today: https://bit.ly/3UN69ST #philanthropy #nonprofits #fundraisers #nonprofit
The Chronicle of Philanthropy
Non-profit Organizations
Washington, D.C. 90,185 followers
About us
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
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http://www.philanthropy.com
External link for The Chronicle of Philanthropy
- Industry
- Non-profit Organizations
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- 51-200 employees
- Headquarters
- Washington, D.C.
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- Privately Held
- Specialties
- journalism, nonprofits, online, and webinars
Locations
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Primary
1255 Twenty-Third St, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20037, US
Employees at The Chronicle of Philanthropy
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George Anders
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Chris Leighton
The Chronicle of Philanthropy | Director of Business Development
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Ronald Barba
Lead editorial for Brand Studio @ The Chronicle of Higher Education | Tech & business reporter turned B2B product marketer. I don't take LinkedIn…
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Justin Moore
Sales Leader | Passionate Team Builder | Transformation Change Agent | Design Thinker | Coach
Updates
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Opinion: Increasing attacks on pro-democracy advocates show why politicians like former President Trump aren’t the only ones at risk from violent political rhetoric, writes Joe Goldman. Goldman is president of the Democracy Fund. https://bit.ly/3WvP3J1
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Julie Morita will become president and CEO of The Joyce Foundation on October 1. In other nonprofit leadership news, GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders (GLAD) has chosen Ricardo Martinez as its next executive director. https://bit.ly/4cYDfp8
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Are conversations around you getting tense? For #TheCommons, Rasheeda Childress spoke to experts to put together a primer for nonprofit professionals on how to handle powderkeg conversation topics — Israel-Hamas, Trump-Biden, etc. — with boards, supporters, staff, and more. https://bit.ly/468YXEw
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In the wake of the shooting at Saturday’s Trump rally, Senior Editor Drew Lindsay spoke with Tim Dixon talks the work of More in Common, which he co-founded after the murder of British politician Jo Cox, a close friend. The organization helps political leaders and social-change movements find the language and strategies to strengthen their coalitions by including unlikely allies. It has teams in Brazil, Britain, France, Germany, Poland, and the United States. Read the story: https://bit.ly/4fbhZ14
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Is Mike Bloomberg’s $1 billion gift to The Johns Hopkins University good or bad philanthropy — or something in-between? Philanthropy expert Amy Schiller examined that question in a recent piece, ultimately arguing that the gift fails the transformative test. What do you think? Respond to the poll and share your thoughts about the gift in the comments. And click through to read Schiller's latest opinion piece for the Chronicle: https://bit.ly/3Y6OZBG
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“We need leaders across society who actually can see there is a hopeful way through,” says Tim Dixon. “You can transcend the divisions. You don’t have to pick a side. You need to define a different common-ground approach. You need to have courage in doing that.” Dixon co-founded More in Common after his close friend Jo Cox, a British politician, was a victim of a political murder. Dixon and his nonprofit help political leaders and social-change movements find the language and strategies to strengthen their coalitions by including “surprising” allies. Drew Lindsay reports for #TheCommons. Read the story: https://bit.ly/4fbhZ14
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🌟Just posted 🌟 This week’s newsletter from #TheCommons. We examine toxic polarization and the attempted assassination of former President Donald Trump through the eyes of More in Common CEO Tim Dixon, whose close friend Jo Cox, a British politician, was a victim of a political murder. Dixon and his nonprofit help political leaders and social-change movements find the language and strategies to strengthen their coalitions by including “surprising” allies. Also: ▶ Ways the nonprofit leaders in their everyday work can help strengthen the social fabric of their communities ▶ Resources to help understand toxic polarization and political violence
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Will J.D. Vance change tax law for endowed nonprofits -- from Harvard University to the Ford Foundation — if he becomes vice president? Read this analysis from Chronicle of Philanthropy Senior Reporter Alex Daniels. "There hasn't been anyone at this height of American politics and policy making who has thought as seriously about these things for more than half a century," Michael Hartmann, senior fellow at the Capital Research Center, said. "Establishment philanthropy and its lobbyists should have at least a little concern now that he's the vice presidential nominee." Read more: https://bit.ly/4d9ge2D
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Opinion: While making medical school free is a worthy endeavor, to truly transform health care, Mike Bloomberg needs to think bigger, writes Amy Schiller. Schiller is the author of The Price of Humanity: How Philanthropy Went Wrong and How to Fix It, and a visiting scholar at Dartmouth College. Read more:https://bit.ly/3Y6OZBG The Johns Hopkins University; The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
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