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Róisín Wood: Philanthropy & Civil Society in Northern Ireland

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Manage episode 488256249 series 2996310
Content provided by Rhodri Davies. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Rhodri Davies or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

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In this episode of the Philanthropisms podcast we talk to Róisín Wood, CEO of the Community Foundation Northern Ireland (CFNI), about the landscape for philanthropy and civil society in Northern Ireland. Including:

  • How and why was CFNI originally formed, and what is the organisation’s focus today?
  • What is the history and current context for civil society in NI?
  • What is the overall makeup of the NI civil society sector, in terms of formalised vs informal orgs, large vs small, different cause areas etc.?
  • What is the history and current context for giving in NI? E.g. how much HNWI giving is there? How much mass market giving? What role does corporate philanthropy play? What role do foundations play?
  • What is the attitude of the NI government towards civil society in general? What is the attitude towards philanthropy?
  • Northern Ireland has a well-document history of challenges with political and religious polarisation - what role have civil society organisations and philanthropy played in trying to overcome this?
  • At a time of increasing polarisation elsewhere, does the NI experience have things to teach CSOs and funders elsewhere about how to address these issues effectively?
  • Are there ongoing challenges with polarisation in NI? Are these continuations of long-standing issues, or are there new fault lines emerging?
  • Does working further upstream demand a willingness to blur the boundaries between philanthropy and politics? How much of a barrier is this?
  • How can philanthropic funders bring people together across divides to have meaningful conversations, work together and find common cause?
  • What is the USP of Community Foundations within the wider ecosystem of philanthropy?
  • Can the successes of place-based initiatives inform activities or policymaking at a regional or national level? How can organisations based in one place ensure they ‘influence upwards’?
  • Is “place” more complex than it is sometimes presented? I.e. at what geographic level do we feel a sense of belonging or identity?
  • Is there potential for cultivating philanthropy from a Northern Irish Diaspora? What might this look like?

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  continue reading

89 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 488256249 series 2996310
Content provided by Rhodri Davies. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Rhodri Davies or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

Send us a text

In this episode of the Philanthropisms podcast we talk to Róisín Wood, CEO of the Community Foundation Northern Ireland (CFNI), about the landscape for philanthropy and civil society in Northern Ireland. Including:

  • How and why was CFNI originally formed, and what is the organisation’s focus today?
  • What is the history and current context for civil society in NI?
  • What is the overall makeup of the NI civil society sector, in terms of formalised vs informal orgs, large vs small, different cause areas etc.?
  • What is the history and current context for giving in NI? E.g. how much HNWI giving is there? How much mass market giving? What role does corporate philanthropy play? What role do foundations play?
  • What is the attitude of the NI government towards civil society in general? What is the attitude towards philanthropy?
  • Northern Ireland has a well-document history of challenges with political and religious polarisation - what role have civil society organisations and philanthropy played in trying to overcome this?
  • At a time of increasing polarisation elsewhere, does the NI experience have things to teach CSOs and funders elsewhere about how to address these issues effectively?
  • Are there ongoing challenges with polarisation in NI? Are these continuations of long-standing issues, or are there new fault lines emerging?
  • Does working further upstream demand a willingness to blur the boundaries between philanthropy and politics? How much of a barrier is this?
  • How can philanthropic funders bring people together across divides to have meaningful conversations, work together and find common cause?
  • What is the USP of Community Foundations within the wider ecosystem of philanthropy?
  • Can the successes of place-based initiatives inform activities or policymaking at a regional or national level? How can organisations based in one place ensure they ‘influence upwards’?
  • Is “place” more complex than it is sometimes presented? I.e. at what geographic level do we feel a sense of belonging or identity?
  • Is there potential for cultivating philanthropy from a Northern Irish Diaspora? What might this look like?

Related Links:

  continue reading

89 episodes

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