View this email in your browser.
This design element acts as the email header. It features PEAK's logo above a blue rectangle. In white text over the blue rectangle, it reads PEAK Weekly.
A collage of insight photos - a hurricane, a crowd of people, building blocks, and rolling green fields.

INSIGHT

Insights on Stewarding Responsively

To complement PEAK’s recently released Steward Responsively Collection, we’ve rounded up a selection of articles that show how members throughout our community have already been putting this Principle into practice—and we hope their insights help you to reimagine grantmaking practices at your own organization.

READ MORE

Join this week’s trending conversations:

Help a colleague! Do you have advice to share on the following topics?

Not yet in CONNECT?

JOIN US

Upcoming Events

May 8–10
ANNUAL CONVENING
PEAK2023

May 9
MEMBER EVENT
2023 PEAK Annual Membership Meeting - Reuniting to Transform Philanthropy 

May 18
CHAPTER MEETING
Monthly Coffee Hour (PEAK Pacific Northwest)

June 7
CHAPTER MEETING
PEAK2023 Aha Moments (PEAK Rocky Mountain)

June 7
CHAPTER MEETING
Leading Without the Title (PEAK Northeast, Midwest, Southeast, Southern California, and Philanthropy New York)

ALL EVENTS >

Weekly Reads

“Let’s not pretend that all philanthropic institutions are trying to be accountable to marginalized people. Many, including several connected to those pushing for philanthropic pluralism in the Chronicle op-ed [“We Disagree on Many Things, but We Speak With One Voice in Support of Philanthropic Pluralism”], are actively harming these communities and seem unlikely to stop. Yes, everyone has a role to play in our collective healing. But any organization that wants to participate in the healing process must first commit to stopping the harm. If philanthropy chooses to prioritize pluralism to the detriment of equity, it aids and abets the oppression of those who have always struggled to be heard.” [more]
Edgar Villanueva, Decolonizing Wealth Project, for The Chronicle of Philanthropy

“To insist that all philanthropic values, missions, and activities are equally valid is at best naïve and at worst harmful to people and communities. To support its erroneous premise, the article glosses over history, if not downright distorts it. ‘The history of philanthropy is a history of using private capital to supplement, not replace other approaches to investing in and supporting a prosperous and just society.’ Philanthropy’s roots are stained with inequity and injustice. So much wealth in this country has been built on a legacy of slavery, stolen Indigenous land, worker exploitation, environmental degradation, and tax avoidance. It is a history of white people and white-led corporations creating the very injustices that they then get lauded for giving fractions of the wealth they hoarded to solve.” [more]
Vu Le, Nonprofit AF

“When it comes to addressing the harms of slavery and colonialism, ‘restorative justice’ is often a more palatable term than ‘reparations’. Perhaps the latter seems coldly transactional, nothing more than a transfer of cash, whereas ‘restorative justice’ implies collaboration and healing. But whichever term they use, groups that advocate for reparations almost never seek only money. Their work is grounded in an understanding that the social, the political and the economic are bound together and must be addressed together, creating the possibility of a better world.” [more]
Olivetti Otele, Soas University of London, for The Guardian

Indiana University’s Lily School report, What Americans Think About Philanthropy and Nonprofits, “provides a fresh look at the health of the independent sector today and specifically examines the following three questions: How does the American public perceive philanthropy and the nonprofit sector? Does the American public see the philanthropic sector as trustworthy, transparent, and confident to solve societal issues? What does the American public know about philanthropy and how aware are they of contemporary debates within the nonprofit sector?” [more]
     

 
PEAK Grantmaking
1701 Pennsylvania Ave NW, Suite 200
Washington, DC 20006-1242

Add us to your address book


update your preferences | unsubscribe

© 2023 PEAK Grantmaking