Giving Compass' Take:
- Reimagining Philanthropy in the Global South is a curated group of resources that focuses on practicing, researching, and advising on philanthropy within the countries or regions of Africa, Asia, and Latin America.
- What are the lessons for individual donors on how best to do global strategic philanthropy? What are the biggest challenges of aid work?
- Learn more about paradigms in philanthropy.
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Reimagining Philanthropy in the Global South is a bit like the arrival of a letter you knew must be on its way, but took a long time to get there.
The editors have put together this long-awaited letter from the field with an academic framing, curating a group of authors practising, researching, and advising on philanthropy with an in-depth understanding of strategic philanthropy and of a respective country or region in Africa, Asia and Latin America. The editors have guided the authors to focus on three challenges in a post Covid-19 world: ‘building networks, effective partnerships, and institutional resilience’.
The book needs to be read, as the editors point out in their introduction, with Covid-19 and the changes it brought about as an amplifier ‘that philanthropy was not empowering its recipients enough, with too many micro decisions about the allocation of funding taken remotely rather than by the communities in need. At a macro level, concerns were raised about the absence of co-funding and collaboration in the sector and the missed opportunities’. The book’s ten chapters are testimony to how philanthropy in the global south found and finds solutions to these broader challenges, drives social impact but also moves within a familiar framework.
Naina Subberwal Batra’s article ‘From Tansactional to Transformational’ discusses AVPN’s learnings as an ecosystem’s builder for philanthropy and beyond in Asia. It is a thought-provoking piece aimed at ‘identifying and articulating the true value of the network’. Everybody interested in how a network organisation can ensure that one plus one is more than two should read about the three AVPN pillars of ‘connect, learn, act’.
In ‘Building Effective Philanthropy through Strategic Partnerships’ J Satrijo Tanudjojo describes how Indonesia’s Tanoto Foundation has its early childhood education scaled in a time of crisis. It highlights their a focus on lowering stunting rates, and education leadership work in collaboration with international partners and the government. The article ends with a sincere reflection of the realities of the foundation’s work, exemplified in the results of their own learning of what strong strategic partnerships require. It is encouraging to read that in the chapters of this publication the success factors for successful partnerships are very similar.
In ‘Gender-Based Violence in South Africa and Multi-Stakeholder Partnerships’, Takalani Netshitenzhe explores how Vodacom and its Vodacom Foundation South Africa have since the early 2000s, and all through the pandemic, evolved their strategies and partnerships against gender-based violence. This case shows how business can contribute with more than just money to standing up to a societal challenge together with civil society and government.
Read the full article about philanthropy in the Global South by Michael Seberich at Alliance Magazine.