Giving Compass' Take:
- In the first session of the six-part series, ‘Rearchiteching the Future Through Philanthropy and Social Entrepreneurship,’ Tulaine Montgomery discusses how philanthropy can tap entrepreneurs of color who are proximate to the systemic challenges to help address these issues.
- What can donors do to find and support social entrepreneurs who are tackling systems change?
- Read more about bridging the gap for social entrepreneurs of color.
What is Giving Compass?
We connect donors to learning resources and ways to support community-led solutions. Learn more about us.
Philanthropy, like other sectors facing a moral reckoning on racial equity, continues to have a vital role to play in creating an America that lives up to the promise of its founding ideals. But we must overcome the bias and barriers that have existed in philanthropy for too long if we hope to unlock the ideas, talent and collaborations that can drive us toward an equitable future.
Recent research has shown that entrepreneurs of color and from underinvested communities receive a disproportionately small fraction of total funding in philanthropy, even though they often are most proximate to many of the systemic challenges we face and have the expertise and systems-focused approaches needed to address them. Bridging the racial funding gap for entrepreneurs and other leaders, which can unleash a new wave of progress against entrenched inequities, will take a shift in mindsets among funders, first and foremost.
“Philanthropy is not restricted to the wealthy, or economically wealthy or the economic elite, right? We all have a role to play,” Tulaine Montgomery, managing partner at New Profit, explained during the first session.
Watch the full video about breaking bias and barriers in philanthropy at Worth.