It's not often I that I get to walk in Winston Churchill's footsteps. This past weekend I had a chance to think about the future of philanthropy with three dozen philanthropists, advisers, scholars, and others at The Ditchley Foundation. The Foundation is housed a manor house in Oxfordshire where Churchill often stayed during World War II, on the premise that his own lodgings were likely bombing targets. I'm not sure if this concern is on the mind of the Ditchley lion (photo above) but he is the first such guardian I've ever seen who seems to be scanning the skies.
In the midst of Downton Abbey madness it was extra fun to "walk the manor paths." We did do some work - here are my reflections.
1. Fascinating discussion about the potential of philanthropy in 21st century to not be a mere byproduct of capitalism but be a positive force of influence on the shape of capitalism. Global income inequality may trigger major changes to capitalism, de-legitimization of philanthropy...
2. In a 21st C global digital world we will see real philanthropy of ideas. Digital economy of ideas moves and acts very differently than "analog economy." This makes open access issues, public research, subsidized research issues very prominent. Europe, UK and USA (and elsewhere?) writing laws about this now - philanthropy needs to be involved.
3. What info tech enables that philanthropy as we've known it definitely needs:
- networks and syndicates
- lower cost of capital
- new sources of data, especially on long tail giving (these are often privately owned by cell carriers and transaction vendors - how do we deal with this?)
- feedback direct from citizens - ways to connect donors directly to people in field without intermediating institutions; ways that do-ers also become donors, reshaping NGOs as we've known them
- new forms of accountability and governance
- intellectual property
- telecommunications laws
- data ownership
- privacy policies
- information access rules
- securities and exchange
- currency laws
- corporation codes
- multilaterals?
4 comments:
We have social media ... social networks ... social capital ... Why not social money and social banks?
Very interesting questions.If we have social money and social banksone day,maybe the world is perfect!
Everything seems to be on "social" these days. But the concepts you've brought up are truly worth thinking about.
Great Article and very fascinating. Thanks for the insight
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