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The Problem of Doing Good: Irving Kristol's Philanthropy

December 15, 2009
by Bradley Center

Transcript Now Available!  Click here for more information.

 

A complete edited transcript is now available of the Bradley Center's December 15, 2009 panel discussion entitled

 

 

The Problem of Doing Good:

Irving Kristol's Philanthropy

 

 

Tuesday, December 15, 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

 

 

 

Event Description  

 

"It is possible to do good.  It really is possible to do good.  Doing good isn't even hard.  It's just doing a lot of good that is very hard.  If your aims are modest, you can accomplish an awful lot. When your aims become elevated beyond a reasonable level, you not only don’t accomplish much, but can cause a great deal of damage." 

  

These words, spoken by the late Irving Kristol to the annual meeting of the Council on Foundations in 1980, shaped his own giving as well.  His generosity's "modest aims" are embodied in several generations of young editors and writers who flourished under his personal instruction at the Public Interest, an influential journal of public affairs.  At the same time, however, he arguably succeeded in the "very hard" task of doing "a lot of good."  For few individuals have influenced the flow of so many dollars to so many scholars, projects, and institutions, with such a profound impact on the course of American public policy. 

   

          Lenkowsky, Wildavsky, Schambra,
                     Piereson, and Hertog
On Tuesday, December 15, the Bradley Center hosted a panel discussion of the full range of Irving Kristol's philanthropy. Panelists included JAMES PIERESON of the William E. Simon Foundation, Indiana University's LESLIE LENKOWSKY, RACHEL WILDAVSKY of the Tikvah Fund, and philanthropist ROGER HERTOGThe Bradley Center's own WILLIAM SCHAMBRA moderated the discussion. 

 

 

  

Recommended Reading (Click title to read PDF.) 

 

- Irving Kristol, "Foundations and the Sin of Pride: The Myth of the Third Sector," a speech given before the Council on Foundations in 1980, IN Amy Kass, editor, Giving Well, Doing Good: Readings for Thoughtful Philanthropists (Indiana University Press, 2008), pp. 260-267. 

 

- Irving Kristol, "On Corporate Philanthropy," The Wall Street Journal, March 21, 1977, reprint no. 65 of the American Enterprise Institute (Washington, DC), April 1977. 

  
 

Program and Panel

 
1
1:45 a.m.
Registration, lunch buffet    

 

12:00 p.m.
Welcome by Hudson Institute's WILLIAM SCHAMBRA

 

12:10
Panel discussion
LESLIE LENKOWSKY, Indiana University
RACHEL WILDAVSKY, Tikvah Fund
JAMES PIERESON, William E. Simon Foundation
ROGER HERTOG, philanthropist


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 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.

Tags - Click a tag for related material

Civic Institutions, Civil Society, Foundations, Philanthropy

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