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« Politaoke correction | Main | The Jesse Helms AIDS Bill? » July 16, 2008 What does a foundation program officer do, anyway?Linda Frye Burnham / 03:02 PM Erica Kohl, a CAN writer ("Connecting Californians") and a doctoral candidate in Social and Cultural Studies at UC Berkeley, has written "The Program Officer: Negotiating the Politics of Philanthropy," posted on the Web site of Berkeley's Institute for the Study of Social Change, where she is a Fellow. It's part of her larger study on the relationship between private philanthropy and farmworker organizing and community development across California’s Central Valley. Says the paper's intro: "This paper concentrates on the central role of the foundation program officer in negotiating the process of grant making. The work of the program officer is revealed as both containing and opening up spaces for addressing political and economic inequity. It is argued that the work of the foundation program officer often limits the approach of granted organizations through professional processes and program frameworks that make poor people responsible for their own betterment while excluding the economic relationships that created the situations the programs seek to ameliorate. Yet findings also point to the role of the program officer as one of significant risk taking and advocacy during non-movement times. Data was gathered through in-depth interviews with foundation program officers, consultants, and grantees, review of foundation program materials, and participant observation at foundation gatherings and presentations." "The Program Officer: Negotiating the Politics of Philanthropy" CommentsPost a comment Thanks for signing in, . Now you can comment. (sign out) (If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.) |
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