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The Chronicle of Philanthropy
Opinion

November 05, 2009

British Donors Urged to Go Public With Their Big Gifts, and More: Thursday's Roundup

  • Dame Stephanie Shirley, Britain’s ambassador for philanthropy, is urging philanthropists to be more public about their giving and get charities to focus more on results, writes Lena Schreiber, a senior consultant at New Philanthropy Capital, a nonprofit research group in London. Her views appear on the group’s blog.
  • Using the online tool Twitter for social change is all about “making sure the message you want to put out there is simple, direct, and genuine,” Jack Dorsey, the co-founder of Twitter, tells Huffington Post.
  • Rick Cohen, national correspondent at the Nonprofit Quarterly, examines whether legislation introduced in the Senate and House will help newspapers transform into nonprofit organizations.

Comments

  1. Hey, I think it’s terrific that the United Kingdom has its “first ambassador of Philanthropy.”

    Are there any proposals in the USA for a similar position and also, are there any state level positions with a similar focus?

    Regards,
    Bill Huddleston
    www.cfcfundraising.com
    Blog:www.cfctreaures.wordpress.com

    — Bill Huddleston    Nov 5, 01:42 PM    #

  2. I would be hard-pressed to come up with a worse prescription for rescuing newspapers than electing nonprofit status.

    Allthough it has recently shamefully fallen down on the job, we rely on the press to be a watchdog of our democracy and a free and open society. To place the press in a position where government regulation makes it more dependent upon government than private commercial entities imperils its objectivity and will irretreivably undermine its credibility.

    This is more than a slippery slope. It is a precipice.

    — Jeff Steele    Nov 8, 01:21 AM    #

 

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