Foundation Roundup
IWMF
African Womens Media Center Builds Database for
Journalists
The African Womens Media Center (AWMC), a project of the International
Womens Media Foundation, has received funding to develop the first
comprehensive online database of African media, which will be available
not only to African journalists but to reporters worldwide.
In addition to the database of African media contacts, AWMC,
based in Senegal, will expand its web site to offer resources, skills
training and networking opportunities for Africas growing pool of
women journalists.
For more information, go to www.awmc.com
or www.iwmf.org.
Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace
Carnegie To Go: World's First Nuclear Database
The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington, DC, now
offers Carnegie to Go, a free service that sends the latest arms proliferation
news to handheld computers.
Using information from databases of global nuclear and global
ballistic missile arsenals, subscribers can learn the number, names and
range of missiles of the worlds largest stockpiles. The service
also offers daily news and analysis of critical proliferation issues.
For more information, go to www.ceip.org/weapons.
GrantCraft Practical Wisdom
For Grantmakers
Ford Foundation Launches GrantCraft: Practical Wisdom
For Grantmakers
The Ford Foundation has a new program called GrantCraft
that shares tools and techniques for effective grantmaking.
Drawing from Fords long history of grantmaking
as well as the experiences of other funders and grantees from around the
world, GrantCraft is producing an innovative series of guides, videos
and case studies. These new materials offer an insiders look at
grantmaking from the practitioners perspective on topics that include
what to do when projects flounder, using requests for proposals, building
community partnerships, scaling up successful work, and amplifying new
voices.
Ford has created a Grant-Craft web site from which
materials may be downloaded or ordered.
For more information, go to www.grantcraft.org.
The Henry J. Kaiser Family
Foundation
Kaiser Foundation Examines Health Care For the Uninsured
A new report from The Henry J. Kaiser Foundation examines community health
care centers that serve a disproportionately large number of uninsured
patients and reveals the ramifications for the centers sustainability.
Not surprisingly, centers with the heaviest concentration
of patients without health coverage operate in areas of the country where
poverty is greatest. Revenues for these operations are declining, due
in part to stagnating government funding levels and declining rates of
Medicaid coverage resulting from welfare reform and other factors. In
fact, sixty-six percent of all health centers are located in states where
a woman with two children who works full time at the minimum wage is not
eligible for Medicaid.
On top of these changes, nearly half the centers risk financial
instability from trying to provide more services than their budgets can
afford, increasing the demand for subsidies from communities with limited
revenue bases.
The report, A Profile of Federally Funded Health Centers
Serving a Higher Proportion of Uninsured Patients, is available online
at www.kff.org.
Supporting Partnerships to
Assure Ready Kids
Kellogg Supports School Readiness Program For Vulnerable
Children
Each year, about one-third of the nearly four million U.S. children who
start school are not ready to learn. To address this gap, the W.K. Kellogg
Foundation has launched an educational program called Supporting
Partnerships to Assure Ready Kids (SPARK) that targets preschool
children who are underserved by existing preschool programs and who are
least likely to have access to quality care and school readiness preparation.
Eight community organizations in seven states and the District
of Columbia have received initial grants to develop effective learning
programs and business models. Upon review and approval of the models,
Kellogg will provide implementation funding for at least five years.
For more information about SPARK, go to www.wkkf.org.
John S. and James L. Knight
Foundation
Knight Foundation Report Examines U.S. Support For International
Journalism
A new report commissioned by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation
reveals that a $600 million U.S. investment in building independent media
in emerging democracies over the last decade has produced mixed results.
While some countries show positive effects from capacity-building
programs that encourage independent reporting, others face economic problems
that have left them vulnerable to exploitation by powerful political leaders
and oligarchs.
The Media Missionaries: American Support for International
Journalism describes the efforts of U.S. government organizations
and foundations to support democratic initiatives by promoting a strong,
independent press. It offers 15 Commandments of Media Development
based on lessons learned from a range of programs around the world.
For more information, go to www.knightfdn.org.
Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors
Rockefellers Offer Service For Managing Global Giving
The Rockefeller family has created the Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors
(RPA), an independent, nonprofit service that develops and manages giving
programs for individuals and families. RPA, located in New York City,
is an outgrowth of the philanthropy office of Rockefeller Family Services,
which advises Rockefeller family members and other clients on charitable
giving in more than 40 countries.
Despite uneasiness about the economy, philanthropy in the
United States is experiencing its biggest growth in 50 years, with total
giving by independent foundations alone reaching $29 billion in 2001.
With over 100 years of experience and multigenerational giving,
RPA is uniquely positioned to offer assistance to individuals and families
who are contemplating or have recently begun philanthropic giving.
For more information, go to www.rockpa.org.
Russell Sage Studies
Russell Sage Studies Cultural Diversity Within Democracy
As part of its Cultural Contact Program, the Russell Sage Foundation has
issued a new report about how democracies accommodate cultural practices
that run counter to mainstream beliefs and existing legal systems.
The report, Engaging Cultural Differences: The Multicultural
Challenge in Liberal Democracies, details results of a study conducted
by an interdisciplinary team funded by Russell Sage called the Law and
Culture Working Group
.The group examined how democratic legal systems influence
mainstream beliefs and values and how democracies deal with non-Western
practices such as child marriage, corporal punishment and female circumcision.
For more information about these and other projects of the
Cultural Contact Program, go to www.russellsage.org.
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
Sports Philanthropy Project Hits The Ground Running
The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation is supporting a growing area of philanthropy
that uses the popularity of sports and athletes to promote community programs.
The Sports Philanthropy Project provides technical assistance to professional
sports associations to help them develop and improve their philanthropic
activities, enhance their impact on community programs and advance best
practices in sports philanthropy.
While most teams already support player appearances and charitable
causes, the new mode of sports philanthropy is aimed at building strong
partnerships between teams and their home communities with the goal of
providing increased support to health and social programs.
Sports have an enormous emotional hook and value to
a community, says Joe Marx of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
These teams can do so much to bring about change if they are focused
and concerned about their local community.
For more information, go to www.sportsphilanthropyproject.com.
Americans For The Arts
Study Finds Arts Industry Is Good For Business
A new report by one of the nations leading arts organizations suggests
that communities faced with scaled-back budgets and the need to set funding
priorities may want to think twice before eliminating support for the
arts, often regarded as extraneous and costly. Results from an economic
impact study by Americans for the Arts show that Americas nonprofit
arts industry generates $134 billion in economic activity every year in
addition to $24.4 billion in federal, state and local tax revenues.
The total reflects a combination of direct spending by arts
organizations ($53.2 billion) and indirect income from things such as
hotels, restaurants, parking and souvenirs ($80.8 billion).
When communities invest in the arts, there is a tendency
to think that they are opting for cultural benefits at the expense of
economic benefits, says Robert Lynch, President of Americans for
the Arts. The arts are an industry that generates extraordinary
economic activity. When we say that the arts mean business, thats
not just a slogan; its the truth.
Data for the research were gathered from 3,000 nonprofit
arts organizations and 40,000 attendees at arts events in 91 cities and
33 states and the District of Columbia.
For more information, go to www.AmericansForTheArts.org.
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