
Building on a Better Foundation:
A Toolkit for Creating an
Inclusive Grantmaking Organization
July 2001
With the latest census data showing an increasingly diverse U.S. population, grantmakers
continue to grapple with difficult questions on how to best address
diversity issues in their work. To help with this effort, MCF has developed “Building on a Better
Foundation: A toolkit for creating an inclusive grantmaking
organization.” The toolkit offers straightforward guidance to help funders
practice diversity both within their organizations and in their
grantmaking work.
Based on MCF's
Diversity Framework, the toolkit
offers assistance on how grantmaking organizations can address inclusivity
in their roles as funders, employers, businesses and community citizens.
For each role the toolkit gives examples, questions for discussion
and some action steps. In
addition, the toolkit includes a resource section with contact
information, books and articles. The
toolkit can help grantmakers develop practices that fulfill the
Principles
for Minnesota Grantmakers, and is one example of how MCF strives to
meet its strategic goal to “create a climate of inclusivity in
philanthropy.”
MCF developed the toolkit in collaboration with regional associations of
grantmakers in Chicago,
New
York and northern California.
Funding for the toolkit came from the four associations along with
major financial support from three
MCF members Otto Bremer Foundation,
Travelers and
The Saint
Paul Foundation and the Sara Lee Foundation.
The Council and its colleague
organizations developed the Toolkit using the following assumptions:
-
People of color and women are
underrepresented in the philanthropic field. A report by the
national Council on Foundations (COF) found that people of color and
women represented just 10.1 percent and 33.5 percent respectively of
the boards of trustees of grantmaking organizations in 1999. And,
according to 1998 COF data, people of color occupied only 17.8
percent of managerial positions and were less than 6 percent of
foundation CEOs.
-
An inclusive grantmaking
organization is more effective and successful. Among other things,
an organization that better reflects current demographics of its
community has a wider range of social and cultural viewpoints to
inform its funding process.
-
Diversity and inclusion at a
grantmaking organization is broader than race and ethnicity and can
include, depending on the demographics of its particular community,
age, gender, sexual orientation, physical ability, philosophy and
viewpoint, as well as class background.
Download the Report
"Building
a Better Foundation" Toolkit (PDF, 23 pages)
Questions?
Contact the Minnesota Council on Foundations:
Phone: 612.338.1989
E-mail: info@mcf.org
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