Accept

Our website is for marketing purposes only and is not intended to be used for services, which are provided over the phone or in person. Accessibility issues should be reported to us ((917) 997-6577) so we can immediately fix them and provide you with direct personal service.

We use basic required cookies in order to save your preferences so we can provide a feature-rich, personalized website experience. We also use functionality from third-party vendors who may add additional cookies of their own (e.g. Analytics, Maps, Chat, etc). Further use of this website constitutes acceptance of our Cookies, Privacy Policy and Terms of Service.

Event Details

Subscribe

Subscribe to Calendar

Use the following links to subscribe to this calendar in other applications that support the iCal format.

All Category Events

Updates to this Event

Confluence Recommends: Does Big Philanthropy Undermine Democracy & Civil Society?

Wednesday, November 30, 2016 | 6:00-8:30pm | Brower Center, 2150 Allston Way, Berkeley

Buy Tickets: bit.ly/philanthropy3D

Join EPIP Bay Area and Northern California Grantmakers (NCG) as panelists debate the motion: Big Philanthropy Undermines Democracy and Civil Society.

Big philanthropy contributes vast resources toward the well-being of humankind, and society benefits immensely from its achievements in health and medicine, education, arts and culture, international development, and other fields. But critics of mega-foundations have been around since they first emerged out of the Gilded Age of the late 19th century, and the critiques have grown loud in recent years with big philanthropy booming in our current Gilded Age. As tax-exempt private organizations that exercise power in the public sphere with nominal democratic controls and accountability to the public, do mega-foundations reinforce the anti-democratic effects of wealth inequality and weaken civil society? Or are the concerns overblown given the record of these organizations?

For The Motion:

  • Leah Hunt-Hendrix, Executive Director of Solidaire
  • Austin Belali, Director of the Youth Engagement Fund at the Democracy Alliance

Against The Motion:

  • Jane Wales, President and CEO of the World Affairs Council and Global Philanthropy Forum
  • Larry Kramer, President of The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation

Moderated By:

Dana Lanza, CEO of Confluence Philanthropy

Buy Tickets: bit.ly/philanthropy3D

date & time

11/30/16 9:00pm — 11:30pm

add to my calendar >

date & time

11/30/16 9:00pm — 11:30pm

Wednesday, November 30, 2016 | 6:00-8:30pm | Brower Center, 2150 Allston Way, Berkeley

Buy Tickets: bit.ly/philanthropy3D

Join EPIP Bay Area and Northern California Grantmakers (NCG) as panelists debate the motion: Big Philanthropy Undermines Democracy and Civil Society.

Big philanthropy contributes vast resources toward the well-being of humankind, and society benefits immensely from its achievements in health and medicine, education, arts and culture, international development, and other fields. But critics of mega-foundations have been around since they first emerged out of the Gilded Age of the late 19th century, and the critiques have grown loud in recent years with big philanthropy booming in our current Gilded Age. As tax-exempt private organizations that exercise power in the public sphere with nominal democratic controls and accountability to the public, do mega-foundations reinforce the anti-democratic effects of wealth inequality and weaken civil society? Or are the concerns overblown given the record of these organizations?

For The Motion:

  • Leah Hunt-Hendrix, Executive Director of Solidaire
  • Austin Belali, Director of the Youth Engagement Fund at the Democracy Alliance

Against The Motion:

  • Jane Wales, President and CEO of the World Affairs Council and Global Philanthropy Forum
  • Larry Kramer, President of The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation

Moderated By:

Dana Lanza, CEO of Confluence Philanthropy

Buy Tickets: bit.ly/philanthropy3D

add to my calendar >