October 19, 2009
by Bradley Center
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Transcript Now Available - Click Here (PDF format, 24 pages, 173 KB)
A complete, edited transcript is now available of the Bradley Center's October 19, 2009 panel discussion entitled
Will the Social Innovation Fund
Fund Social Innovation?
Monday, October 19, 2009 - 12:00 to 2:00 p.m.
Hudson Institute - Betsy and Walter Stern Conference Center
1015 15th Street, NW - Suite 600
Washington, DC 20005
Click here to download the essay commissioned for this discussion, by Rick Cohen (PDF format, 16 pages, 264 KB)
Event Description
The Edward M. Kennedy Serve America Act, signed by President Obama in April 2009, not only expanded the programs of the Corporation for National and Community Service, it also established the Social Innovation Fund, designed to "work with the grantmaking community to fund promising nonprofits that have demonstrated outcomes" in solving "some of our nation's most difficult social challenges," as the CNCS website put it.
The Fund will direct at least 85 percent of appropriated dollars to "grantmaking entities," which presumably include private and community foundations as well as other sorts of intermediaries, for regranting to promising, proven nonprofits. The grantmaking intermediary will be responsible for the performance of those nonprofits, and will be expected to match federal funding dollar for dollar, with that amount also to be matched by the ultimate grantee.
What, in general, do we know about social innovation and how it occurs? How effective is the Social Innovation Fund likely to be in providing meaningful help to the most promising nonprofits in America? Does the possible inclusion of private and community foundations as "vendors" of government services provide a new model of partnership, or pose a unique threat, for our civic institutions?
To answer these and other questions, we asked RICK COHEN of The Nonprofit Quarterly to prepare a monograph on the prospects for the Social Innovation Fund. This publication (click here to download) served as the focus of the October 19 conversation, which also included former Indianapolis mayor and vice chair of the CNCS board STEPHEN GOLDSMITH, the Heritage Foundation's MATTHEW SPALDING, and CHERYL DORSEY of Echoing Green. Bradley Center Director WILLIAM SCHAMBRA moderated the discussion.
12:00 p.m.
Welcome by Hudson Institute's WILLIAM SCHAMBRA
12:10
Panel discussion
RICK COHEN, The Nonprofit Quarterly
STEPHEN GOLDSMITH, Corporation for National and Community Service
CHERYL DORSEY, Echoing Green
MATTHEW SPALDING, The Heritage Foundation
1:10
Question-and-answer session
2:00
Adjournment
Further Information
To request further information on this event or the Bradley Center, please contact Kristen 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.
Click here to view the full list of Event Transcripts.
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