July 21, 2011
by Bradley Center
,
Bradley Center
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Reclaiming the Moral Life
of Philanthropy?
Thursday, July 21 - 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
Delivering an address entitled “Reclaiming the Moral Life of Philanthropy” at MIT in September 2010, Atlantic Philanthropies president Gara LaMarche noted that he felt:
a disquiet about the way we in the foundation world, along with the organisations we support and the infrastructure many of us have helped to build, have mirrored trends in the political world to talk about what we do and why we are doing it in ways that have strayed too far from first principles. We have become more about the fix, the intervention – to use a horribly dominant word in the field that calls to mind invading armies – than about the reasons for doing or caring about it. In marching under the flag of what works, and in particular what can be proven or demonstrated through the rigours of evidence, we risk straying too far from what is right. I think it is time to strike a better balance.
Has philanthropy begun to lose its moral bearings? Has it become more concerned with the means than the ends? We wrestled with these questions and others as we discussed Mr. Lamarche’s speech on July 21st. Joining Gara LaMarche on the panel were Indiana University's Leslie Lenkowsky, Maya Wiley of the Center for Social Inclusion, and Phil Buchanan from the Center for Effective Philanthropy. Bradley Center Director William Schambra moderated the discussion.
Required Reading
Please click here to read Gara LaMarche's September 2010 remarks at the Starr Forum at Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

11:30 a.m.
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.
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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