A powerful critique of a seemingly beneficial trend that is actually
undermining the effectiveness of philanthropyWritten by an insider --
a former official with several high-profile nonprofitsCo-published
with the prominent New York think tank Demos A new movement is afoot
that promises to save the world by bringing the magic of the market to
philanthropy. Nonprofits should be run like businesses, its adherents
say, and businesses can find new sources of revenue by marketing goods
and services that benefit society. Dubbed “philanthrocapitalism,”
its supporters believe that business principles can and should be the
primary drivers of social transformation. What could be wrong with
that?Plenty, argues, former Ford Foundation director Michael Edwards.
In this hard-hitting, controversial expose he marshals a wealth of
evidence to show just how far short the promise of philnthrocapitalism
has fallen, and why the whole concept is fundamentally flawed. Some
business practices can be beneficial to nonprofits, and it’s
definitely a good thing that the for-profit sector is developing a
social conscience. Edwards carefully specifies when businesses and
business thinking can help. But to really get at the root causes of
the systemic problems most nonprofits wrestle with—hunger, poverty,
disease, violence—requires a completely different way of operating.
Social transformation demands cooperation rather than competition,
collective action more than individual effort, and values patient,
long-term support for solutions over short-term results.
Philanthrocapitalism concentrates power in the hands of a few major
players, mirroring the very inequities civil organizations should be
trying to ameliorate. With a vested interest in the status quo it
shies away from fundamental change. At most all it can promise is
valuable but limited advances: small change. Ultimately, Edwards
argues that the use of business thinking can and does corrupt civil
society. It’s time to differentiate the two and re-assert the
independence of global citizen action.
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Why Business Won't Save the World
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781605096551
Publisert
2014
Utgiver
Berrett-Koehler
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Antall sider
125
Forfatter