Community Centric Fundraising: Centering our Communities in Fundraising and Philanthropy
This session will answer questions about the emerging movement of Community Centric Fundraising.
This session will answer questions about the emerging movement of Community Centric Fundraising.
Join MPC and MANP on Friday, December 13th in Augusta to come together with nonprofit organizations, funders, and government officials to think about how nonprofits can impact policy in the 132nd legislative session.
Blending video modules with live facilitated discussions, this 1.5 day workshop presents a historical, cultural, and structural analysis of racism and inequity.
Join GCIR, movement organizations, and funders for a post-election debrief and discussion about these new realities, what strategies are already being put into play, and how philanthropy can align its grantmaking to support those efforts while keeping an eye on the long game of building a multiracial and inclusive democracy.
We’ll explore how conventional philanthropy’s institutionalized culture can block meaningful change despite our community-centered commitments, and how we can balance a more organic, adaptive and relational way of collaborating with structure and clarity.
One week after the federal election, join philanthropic futurist Trista Harris from FutureGood and CDP’s Chief Financial and Operation Officer, Brenda Camacho, for our last scheduled webinar of 2024. They will discuss where current trends are headed and how we can build the future we want to see for ourselves, our sector and our communities.
During this webinar, our speakers will discuss how climate change is upending traditional disaster philanthropy and creating an opportunity for funders to rethink and adapt to the changing environment.
In November, MANP is gathering our network to explore ways to shift from problem-solving to possibility and discuss how we must work together to achieve shared goals.
In this webinar, disabled Indigenous leaders will share their knowledge and lived experiences at the intersection of disability justice and Indigenous self-determination.
Join this event as we welcome Professor Monte Mills and Dr. Suzanne Greenlaw to discuss the topic of Landback and the Law.