GIA Blog

Posted on November 24, 2010 by GIA News

(11-24-10) The Chronicle of Philanthropy will host a live online discussion titled Effective Advocacy: Lessons for Charities and Grant Makers on Tuesday, November 30, noon EST/9am PST. Guest participants are Antha N. Williams, Atlantic Philanthropies; Dan Cramer, Grassroots Solutions; and Tom Novick, M+R Strategic Services.

Posted on November 19, 2010 by GIA News

(11-19-10) National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) Chairman Rocco Landesman, U.S. Conference of Mayors Executive Director and CEO Tom Cochran, and American Architectural Foundation President and CEO Ron Bogle are pleased to announce the Mayors’ Institute on City Design’s (MICD) most recent publication, Creative Placemaking by Dr. Ann Markusen, principal of Markusen Economic Research Services, and Anne Gadwa, principal with Metris Arts Consulting.

Posted on November 18, 2010 by GIA News

(11-18-10) For five years, Aaron Huey has photographed life on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation. This week, TED posted to its website Huey's affecting, emotional TEDx presentation, a weaving together of the things he's seen and the history he's learned.

Watch the video here.

Posted on November 17, 2010 by GIA News

(11-17-10) The draft discussion proposal released November 10, 2010 by the National Commission for Fiscal Responsibility and Reform co-chairs, Erskine Bowles and Alan Simpson, provides a number of options to reform our nation's budget and revenue system, identifying many of the tough choices ahead in efforts to restore fiscal stability. Bowles and Simpson emphasized that the draft proposal reflects only their views and is intended to generate substantive discussion among panel members.

Posted on November 17, 2010 by GIA News

(11-17-10) Independent Sector (www.independentsector.org) is now accepting nominations for the 2011 John W. Gardner Leadership Award, which recognizes an individual whose leadership in or with the nonprofit and philanthropic community has been transformative and who has mobilized and unified people, institutions, or causes that improve lives. The deadline for nominations is January 31, 2011.

Posted on November 17, 2010 by GIA News

(11-17-10) Beyond the Recycling Bin: Greening Practices of Grantmakers, a new report by the Grants Managers Network attempts to answer that question by exploring the greening practices are currently in use by grantmaking organizations, the variables affecting the number and type of practices implemented by grantmakers, and their perceived barriers to greening. The report is based on a survey of the practices of nearly 300 grantmakers.

Posted on November 14, 2010 by GIA News

(11-14-10) Former GIA member Diane Ragsdale (Mellon Foundation) just launched a new blog on ArtsJournal called Jumper - Diane Ragsdale on What the Arts Do and Why.

Posted on November 12, 2010 by GIA News

(11-12-10) On November 10, Civic Ventures announced the ten recipients of its Purpose Prize, a prize designed to encourage and award charitable work by individuals over age 60. This year’s group was selected from 1,400 nominations by a panel of 27 judges, chaired by Sherry Lansing, the former movie-studio head who now runs her own foundation. Five recipients received $100,000 prizes and five received $50,000 prizes.

Posted on November 11, 2010 by GIA News

(11-11-10) The latest installment of Hildy Gottlieb's Making Change podcast is an interview with Margaret Martin, the founder of Harmony Project, a program that targets at-risk youth in Los Angeles for positive youth/community development through ongoing, year-round music lessons and ensemble participation. The upshot: "visionary community leadership of the future will come from encouraging creative thinking in young people today."

Listen here.

Posted on November 10, 2010 by GIA News

(11-10-10) Michael Boehm on Culture Monster:

“Let me tell you about the very rich,” F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote in 1926. “They are different from you and me.”

The facts support him still, judging by a study of rich folks’ charitable habits released Tuesday. One of the things that most differentiates them from the rest of us, it reveals, is that they give to the arts.