Controversies in Philanthropy: FSSO 119-100 Fall 2021Main MenuChapter 1: EducationAllen La Tournous, Jenna Purslow, Max ZweibackChapter 2: The ArtsChapter 3: HealthcareChapter 4: Social Justice Nonprofitsby Jaidyn Emerson, Nic Kelleher, Chloe MaciejewskiChapter 5: Philanthropy in Developing CountriesWhy Philanthropy MattersBarbara Burgess-Van Akendffa201f9e142dde249b32b2c708a4eebdb9f6da
Book on philanthropy- Group 7
12021-11-16T01:36:11+00:00Margaret Sturm99a788288f1324f13d09b66e2dc93e7c519c3f381121This book is cited in the paragraph below and contains much good information on why philanthropy exists.plain2021-11-16T01:36:11+00:00Margaret Sturm99a788288f1324f13d09b66e2dc93e7c519c3f38
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12021-11-03T20:21:12+00:00What is Ineffective Philanthropy13image_header2021-11-17T19:19:17+00:00Through this chapter we will analyze what makes philanthropy effective in developing countries. By looking through different NGOs and their mission around the globe, we will explore controversies in the developing world. No NGO mentioned in this chapter is completely ineffective however certain NGOs are more effective than others at balancing the demands to be an effective NGO. The book Why Philanthropy Matters: How the Wealthy Give, and What It Means for Our Economic Well-Being lists the importance of philanthropy as, "it [philanthropy] solves the “problem of wealth” and its corollary of the presence of vast inequality in capitalist economies" (Zoltan 1). The goals of philanthropy are therefore to improve the wellbeing of humans by solving social and structural problems while dealing with the monetary inequality. In developing countries these goals can be solidified more to focus on developing countries society and infrastructure to improve the wellbeing of people.