In reciprocity, we trust: Improving grantmaking through relational philanthropy

IF 1.5 Q3 BUSINESS
Janis Petzinger, Tobias Jung
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Abstract

With a growing emphasis on empowering communities amongst the practices of philanthropic foundations, practitioners recognise the need for giving strategies grounded in communities of practice's contextual and contingent knowledge. This bringing of beneficiaries' lived experiences into grantmaking represents a wider recognition that sees gift-giving as a dialogical process that uses relationships with community beneficiaries as the point of departure for creating progressive forms of philanthropy, broadly referred to as ‘relational philanthropy’. Foundations that declare themselves as relational funders typically take a more trusting approach by offering more unrestricted, longer-term funding, simplifying reporting requirements, and empowering grantees to use the resources provided more flexibly. In this paper, we argue that relational philanthropy expresses a form of ‘relational work’, as it possesses a trust-based character that speaks to the reciprocal power of gift-giving, whereby both benefactors and beneficiaries receive value from the co-created, context-drivengift exchange: beneficiaries receive philanthropic resources (time, treasure, talent, ties) with more control over spending, while the benefactors gain grassroots insights that can inform future funding policies and practices. In this paper, we show that such reciprocity between funders and their beneficiaries is an important step towards empowering communities for three reasons: (1) by strengthening trust in, and sharing power with, their grantees, foundations empower them to engage more thoroughly with their communities; (2) by grantees communicating their community-level lived experiences to foundations, foundations can develop more informed and relevant grantmaking decisions, and; (3) as reciprocal exchanges are built on trust, this relational philanthropy creates social capital that strengthens relationships and solidarity across civil society.

在互惠中,我们信任:通过关系型慈善事业改进捐赠活动
随着慈善基金会在实践中越来越重视增强社区的能力,实践者认识到有必要制定以实 践社区的背景知识和偶然知识为基础的捐赠战略。这种将受益人的生活经验引入捐赠活动的做法,代表了一种更广泛的认识,即认为赠与是一个对话的过程,以与社区受益人的关系为出发点,创造进步形式的慈善事业,即广义上的 "关系型慈善事业"。宣称自己是关系型资助者的基金会通常会采取更加信任的方式,提供更多无限制的、更长期的资金,简化报告要求,并授权受资助者更灵活地使用所提供的资源。在本文中,我们认为关系型慈善表达了一种 "关系型工作",因为它具有基于信 任的特征,体现了赠与的互惠力量,即受益人和受惠人都能从共同创造的、情境驱动 的赠与交换中获得价值:受惠人获得慈善资源(时间、财富、人才、纽带),并对支出 有更多的控制权,而受益人则获得基层的洞察力,从而为未来的资助政策和实践提供 参考。在本文中,我们表明,资助者与受益人之间的这种互惠是增强社区能力的重要一步,原因有三:(1)通过加强对受赠者的信任并与之分享权力,基金会增强了受赠者的能力,使他们能够更深入地参与社区活动;(2)通过受赠者向基金会介绍他们在社区层面的生活经验,基金会可以做出更明智、更相关的资助决策;(3)由于互惠交流建立在信任的基础上,这种关系型慈善事业创造了社会资本,加强了整个公民社会的关系和团结。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
2.20
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