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Is Philanthropy a Profession? Should It Be?

October 28, 2010
by Bradley Center

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Event Description


In a provocative and thoughtful essay in The Foundation Review, long-time foundation executive Karl Stauber argues that "Philanthropy is not a profession, and it should not become one. We should be rigorous. We should learn from our work. We should help our partners and be helped by them. But a wisdom-focused approach may produce better results than a science-based one." This may seem like a startling conclusion, in a time when foundations are moving toward ever more "scientific" metrics for their work, a unique disciplinary vocabulary is growing up around grantmaking, and credentials are being awarded by academic institutions for professional standing in philanthropic work.

 

Is philanthropy a profession? Should it be? These and other questions raised by Mr. Stauber's article "Philanthropy: Are We a Profession? Should We Be?" were addressed by a knowledgeable panel of scholars and practitioners. Panelists included author Karl Stauber, as well as Susan Ditkoff of The Bridgespan Group, The Foundation Review's Teri Behrens, and Joseph Palus, a Ph.D. student at The Center on Philanthropy at Indiana University. Bradley Center Director William Schambra moderated the discussion.

 

 

 Stauber, Behrens, Schambra, Palus, Ditkoff
Program and Panel

11:45 a.m.
Registration, lunch buffet

12:00 p.m.
Welcome by Hudson Institute's William Schambra

12:10 Panel discussion
Karl Stauber, President & CEO of the Danville Regional Foundation
Susan Wolf Ditkoff, Partner at The Bridgespan Group
Teri Behrens, Editor of The Foundation Review
Joseph Palus, Ph.D. student at The Center on Philanthropy at Indiana University

1:10
Question-and-answer session

2:00
Adjournment

To Request Information
To request further information on this event or the Bradley Center, please contact Kristen McIntyre at (202) 974-2424 or kmcintyre@hudson.org






Hudson Institute's Bradley Center for Philanthropy and Civic Renewal aims to explore the usually unexamined intellectual assumptions underlying the grantmaking practices of America’s foundations and provide practical advice and guidance to grantmakers who seek to support smaller, grassroots institutions in the name of civic renewal.


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Civil Society, Philanthropy, Professionalism

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