In this episode, Joy reflects on the crisis in funding for feminist and justice-focused non-profits, where traditional philanthropy has dramatically declined in recent years. She explores the need for organizations to move beyond simply plugging funding gaps and instead build financial power by rethinking how assets are used to generate revenue.
Drawing on examples such as the Equality Fund, Joy makes the case for a feminist financial imagination, one that sees finance as a system of power to be reshaped rather than just a source of grants. Using metaphors from South Park to foundations’ endowments, she outlines how organizations can leverage assets strategically, shift power dynamics, and create more durable, resilient structures for social change.
Episode Highlights
Relevant Links
Part of the ImpactAlpha Podcast Network
All our Tools are open source and free to use, repurpose and adapt to your context. If you’d like us to adapt them for you, get in touch.
The Blueprints demonstrate how a variety of social change organizations can design strategies that use systems of finance as tools to create positive social change.
These roadmaps lay out insights for how finance can be used to address gender-based violence in a range of sectors, asset classes, geographies, and investor types.
The TOOLKIT is designed to support your journey as you explore how finance can be used as a tool to create social change.
1K Churches was launched in 2012 to galvanize a movement in the faith-based community and engage US churches to invest in the local economy.
These gender-based violence due diligence tools analyze existing due diligence categories – including political, regulatory, operational, and reputational risks – and show how they can be affected by gender-based violence.
Gender-based violence is ubiquitous. More than 1 in 3 women worldwide experiences physical or sexual violence, and millions of men, boys, and gender-diverse individuals are affected by physical, sexual, and emotional abuse daily.