Global Fund for Women: Challenging the Traditional Model of Philanthropy Course

Global Fund for Women: Challenging the Traditional Model of Philanthropy

Kavita Ramdas
Stanford

Course Description

Lectures

  1. Definition of Entrepreneurship  Lecture favorites

    Lecture 1 - Definition of Entrepreneurship

    Kavita Ramdas, President and CEO of the Global Fund for Women, defines entrepreneurship by looking to the roots of the French language. She found two words: "entre" and "prendre" that suggest the act of immersion into something that also takes hold of you.

  2. The Story of Global Fund for Women  Lecture favorites

    Lecture 2 - The Story of Global Fund for Women

    Kavita Ramdas, President and CEO of the Global Fund for Women talks about the organization as a classic Silicon Valley story taking birth in a kitchen in 1987. The organization provides seed and strengthening capital for social entrepreneurs who are working for change.

  3. Early Investors in Global Fund for Women  Lecture favorites

    Lecture 3 - Early Investors in Global Fund for Women

    Early investors in Global Fund for Women were Bill Hewlett, David Packard, Esther and Walter Hewlett, says Ramdas. These were people who understood that you could take a risk on a small organization getting started in a kitchen, the Global Fund for Women, she explains.

  4. Distributing Capital: Using an Exisiting, Well Informed Network  Lecture favorites

    Lecture 4 - Distributing Capital: Using an Exisiting, Well Informed Network

    One of the premises of the way the Global Fund for Women thought about distributing capital to social entrepreneurs was that there already existed a network of people who knew where critical things were happening on the ground, says Ramdas.

  5. Women Drive Change in Their Circumstances and Communities.  Lecture favorites

    Lecture 5 - Women Drive Change in Their Circumstances and Communities.

    Ramdas reveals that she was attracted to the work of the Global Fund because women were doing things to both change their own circumstances, and also to transform what existed in their own communities. She was amazed that there was an organization that was willing to put the resources directly into the hands of women.

  6. Challenging the Traditional Model of Philanthropy  Lecture favorites

    Lecture 6 - Challenging the Traditional Model of Philanthropy

    The Global Fund for Women was not started by wealthy women. It was started by three working women who were deeply committed, passionately immersed, in a notion that you could promote social change by investing in women. It does not require a lot of money to invest in philanthropy for social change.

  7. Women's Issues  Lecture favorites

    Lecture 7 - Women's Issues

    Entrepreneurs don't just pick one issue to work on. Ramdas addresses the fact that there is no singularity in women's issues. Issues related to women are across all segments. She quotes the same by giving examples of HIV AIDS, war and economic development.

  8. Examples of Social Entrepreneurs  Lecture favorites

    Lecture 8 - Examples of Social Entrepreneurs

    In social entrepreneurship, many issues are blended and need to be addressed together. Ramdas shares two examples of social entrepreneurs very close to her heart. She talks about entrepreneurship being the willingness to work and assume risks at the same time for implementing changes in the society.

  9. The Current Need For the True Spirit of Entrepreneurship  Lecture favorites

    Lecture 9 - The Current Need For the True Spirit of Entrepreneurship

    Kavita Ramdas, President and CEO of the Global Fund for Women stresses that the United States is presently in a secure position and stable than most other parts of the world. She believes that it is right time to build the true spirit of entrepreneurship. She stresses that civilizations from other countries are all a part of the global community.

  10. The Universality of Human Rights  Lecture favorites

    Lecture 10 - The Universality of Human Rights

    Ramdas answers the questions, "How to approach womens' rights in other countries, without seeming an activist?"; "What are the universalities of human rights?" GFW has found that women in their respective countries are extremely good judges of what issues are most important, what risks are involved, and the best ways to address these problems without creating direct confrontation or conflict. They often fund groups of women, rather than individuals. Women's issues that are the most controversial around the world include: lesbian rights, reproductive health, abortion rights.

  11. Sense of Being a Global Citizen  Lecture favorites

    Lecture 11 - Sense of Being a Global Citizen

    Ramdas's father was in the military, and her mother was a social activist. The family was a middle-class Indian family, yet privileged to be in such a position.  As a result of her upbringing, Ramdas has a combination of seeking structure/order and an urge to constantly question authority. The family moved often, and she developed a strong sense of what it meant to be a global citizen.

  12. Sustainability for Non-Profit Organizations  Lecture favorites

    Lecture 12 - Sustainability for Non-Profit Organizations

    Kavita Ramdas, President and CEO of The Global Fund for Women (GFW) understands the importance of sustainability for its grantees because it must also be a sustainable organization. GFW helps grantees by discussing up front ways for strengthening and expanding funding in local communities. She stresses that sustainability is not to be confused with creating a profit-making venture. GFW also perceives that funding should continue over longer periods of time and groups should be encouraged to diversify funding base, build more capacity, engage with others in the community.

  13. A Different Kind of Philanthropy  Lecture favorites

    Lecture 13 - A Different Kind of Philanthropy

    The Global Fund for Women believes there is room for a different kind of philanthropy to exist in other parts of the world. In most parts, there is a huge division between those who have and those who do not have. Those with wealth do not tend to see investment in development as part of their responsibility. Ramdas notes that this is thinking that must change.

  14. Local vs. International Philanthropy  Lecture favorites

    Lecture 14 - Local vs. International Philanthropy

    Global Fund for Women CEO Kavita Ramdas talks about financial contributions for the greater good both locally and internationally - and that here in the US we give a very small percentage of our income to remedy the world's concerns. Ramdas cites the gap that exists between how much people think our government should be giving to global relief - 15-20 percent of our national income - but that less than 1% actually makes its way outside the United States.

  15. Measure of Success in Philanthropy  Lecture favorites

    Lecture 15 - Measure of Success in Philanthropy

    How do philanthropies measure success? The Global Fund for Women makes general support grants, not project support grants. This is a huge issue in philanthropy, because general support grants are much harder to measure.

  16. Grantee Selection Criteria for Global Fund for Women  Lecture favorites

    Lecture 16 - Grantee Selection Criteria for Global Fund for Women

    The Global Fund for Women (GFW) is overwhelmed with requests for grants-3,000 every year, in many languages, says Ramdas. International advisors give feedback on priorities for social areas in their communities. GFW also have a basic set of criteria -- is it a group of women instead of an individual, do they have a clear articulation of how they will challenge women's positions within that society? GFW doesn't give a grant until they have an endorsement from the ground, she says.

  17. Grass Roots Work vs. Philanthropic Work  Lecture favorites

    Lecture 17 - Grass Roots Work vs. Philanthropic Work

    Ramdas considered work in grass roots versus at the philanthropic level. One of the things that pushed her to reflect on that decision, was where she could best use her skills and how they would lead to the best results.

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