I study US private foundations, and I’ve observed two things: EA has made virtually no progress in influencing grantmaking, while trust based philanthropy (TBP) has had massive adoption. I think that many believe that EA and TBP are in conflict with one another, but I don’t think that is necessarily the case. I am thinking about writing a post/research paper that makes the case these two movements are compatible with one another.
I work in fundraising but don’t have any experience with it outside EA; I’d be really interested in reading this piece.
Your thesis also happens to parallel one of the few conversations I’ve had about TBP: a non-EA friend was talking about what she didn’t like about EA; she espoused TBP instead; I asked her a bunch of questions and was generally confused because what she described sounded very similar to how lots of EA funding works.
I study US private foundations, and I’ve observed two things: EA has made virtually no progress in influencing grantmaking, while trust based philanthropy (TBP) has had massive adoption. I think that many believe that EA and TBP are in conflict with one another, but I don’t think that is necessarily the case. I am thinking about writing a post/research paper that makes the case these two movements are compatible with one another.
I work in fundraising but don’t have any experience with it outside EA; I’d be really interested in reading this piece.
Your thesis also happens to parallel one of the few conversations I’ve had about TBP: a non-EA friend was talking about what she didn’t like about EA; she espoused TBP instead; I asked her a bunch of questions and was generally confused because what she described sounded very similar to how lots of EA funding works.