Patricia Illingworth looks at the ethics of philanthropy, arguing that philanthropic donors have human rights responsibilities. She makes an urgent case that philanthropy will be more ethical, and more effective, if it is reconfigured around human rights.
Patricia Illingworth looks at the ethics of philanthropy, arguing that philanthropic donors have human rights responsibilities. She makes an urgent case that philanthropy will be more ethical, and more effective, if it is reconfigured around human rights.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Patricia Illingworth is an author, philosopher, and lawyer who works on some of the most urgent social, ethical, and human rights problems that face people and their communities. She has been a Fellow at Harvard Law School, Harvard Medical School and most recently, Senior Fellow at the Carr Center for Human Rights Policy at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government. She is Professor of Philosophy and Business at Northeastern University. She lives in Cambridge, MA. Her website is https://www.patriciaillingworth.com
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction Plan of this Book Chapter 1 - Mismatch Giving in the US Need: Poverty and Inequality For One and For All Chapter 2 - Corporations Doing Good Greed is Good! The Rise of Compassionate Capitalism Chapter 3 - Giving Well: Philanthropy for Human Rights The Human Rights Responsibilities of Non-State Actors Social Expectations are Changing The Power of a Social License Chapter 4 - Blood Money Two Sides of the Same Coin To Accept, or Not to Accept Through A Human Rights Lens Chapter 5 - Doing Good to do Bad Variations on a Theme Jeffrey Epstein's Gift to MIT Media Lab Tackling Moral Self-Licensing A Place for Ethics Codes Chapter 6 - Fundraising with Dignity for All Poverty Porn and Donor Manipulation Protecting Human Rights The Good Place Chapter 7 - Philanthropy's Democracy Problem A Study in Contrast Protecting Democracy Influence: The Devil is in the Details Saving Civil Society For the Sake of Democracy Chapter 8 - The Fierce Urgency of Now Same Storm, Different Boats Philanthropy Stepping Up: Sort Of Giving For Human Rights If Not Now, Then When? Chapter 9 - Accelerating Human Rights Due Diligence for Human Rights Fundraisers: Practice What You Preach Nonprofits: When to Say No Donors: To Give or Not to Give Bibliography Notes by Chapter
Introduction Plan of this Book Chapter 1 - Mismatch Giving in the US Need: Poverty and Inequality For One and For All Chapter 2 - Corporations Doing Good Greed is Good! The Rise of Compassionate Capitalism Chapter 3 - Giving Well: Philanthropy for Human Rights The Human Rights Responsibilities of Non-State Actors Social Expectations are Changing The Power of a Social License Chapter 4 - Blood Money Two Sides of the Same Coin To Accept, or Not to Accept Through A Human Rights Lens Chapter 5 - Doing Good to do Bad Variations on a Theme Jeffrey Epstein's Gift to MIT Media Lab Tackling Moral Self-Licensing A Place for Ethics Codes Chapter 6 - Fundraising with Dignity for All Poverty Porn and Donor Manipulation Protecting Human Rights The Good Place Chapter 7 - Philanthropy's Democracy Problem A Study in Contrast Protecting Democracy Influence: The Devil is in the Details Saving Civil Society For the Sake of Democracy Chapter 8 - The Fierce Urgency of Now Same Storm, Different Boats Philanthropy Stepping Up: Sort Of Giving For Human Rights If Not Now, Then When? Chapter 9 - Accelerating Human Rights Due Diligence for Human Rights Fundraisers: Practice What You Preach Nonprofits: When to Say No Donors: To Give or Not to Give Bibliography Notes by Chapter
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