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ETHOS Series: Reimagining Funder Roles in a Trust-Based Context

27Apr2021
Hosting Organization: 
Grantmakers for Effective Organizations
When: 
Tuesday, April 27, 2021 1:00pm EDT
Where: 
Webinar
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Philanthropy California, the Trust-Based Philanthropy Project, and GEO invite you to join their 5-part series on the Ethos of being Trust-Based, dedicated to exploring the fundamental values and dispositions central to a trust-based approach. At the heart of this work is a deep focus on building trust and relationships at every level, both internally and externally. In the fifth and final session, participants will explore what it looks like to reimagine traditional funder-grantee roles.

Trust-based philanthropy encourages us to rethink our notions of traditional philanthropic roles, which tend to prioritize transactions over relationships. In fact, a trust-based approach encourages us to understand our roles as partners working in service of nonprofits and communities. Traditional Philanthropy has institutionalized and perpetuated harmful tropes about funders as experts and nonprofits as needy people who need to be held accountable. This has been perpetuated institutionally through our grantmaking practices, but also in less obvious ways, such as job descriptions, theories of change, program descriptions, and the language we use to describe our work.

In this session moderated by Shaady Salehi of the Trust-Based Philanthropy Project,  you will:

- Identify how to recognize these tropes when they’re present in our work
- Explore strategies to intentionally name and undo them
- Reimagine various aspects of our work in which we can set the stage for more authentic relationships, i.e., those rooted in values of power-sharing and genuine collaboration
- Learn strategies for applying a more collaborative, partner-oriented approach

How to Register/RSVP: