
Philanthropisms
Philanthropisms is the podcast that puts philanthropy in context. Through conversations with expert guests and deep dives into topics, host Rhodri Davies explores giving throughout history, the key trends shaping generosity around the world today and what the future might hold for philanthropy. Contact: rhodri@whyphilanthropymatters.com.
Philanthropisms
ERNOP: Connecting Philanthropy Academia & Practice #11
In the eleventh edition of our podcast partnership with the European Research Network on Philanthropy (ERNOP), we talk to more academics whose work is featured in the latest batch of short, practitioner-focused ERNOP Research Notes.
In this episode we hear from:
- Maria Jedicke (formerly of University of Freiburg), about her research on how to design effective volunteering appeals.
- Georg von Schnurbein (University of Basel) about his paper (with Alice Hengevoss) looking at the different strategies used by spend-down foundations.
- Tine Faseur & Tine de Bock (KU Leuven) about their research (withe Glen Timmermans) on donor perceptions of what constitutes ethical fundraising.
Further Resources:
- ERNOP's Research Notes
- Maria's paper, "Designing Effective Volunteering Appeals: Results of Choice-Based Conjoint and Latent Class Segmentation Analyses", and the accompanying ERNOP research note, by Ashifa Agede.
- Georg's paper (with Alice Hengevoss), "All Good Things Come to an End: Emerging Strategic Patterns of Sunset Foundations", and the accompanying ERNOP research note, by Martina Ulrichs
- Tine & Tine's paper (with Glen Timmermans), "Fundraising Ethics: Toward an In-Depth Understanding of Individual Donors’ Perceptions", and the accompanying ERNOP research note by Franziska Juch & Antonia Muhr.
If you would like to contribute to making academic work accessible and more relevant for people working in, with or for philanthropy, then why not consider becoming an ERNOP practitioner expert and help translate academic work on philanthropy into research notes in close collaboration with the authors of the original work.
https://ernop.eu/information-for-practitioner-experts/
Or, if you or your organisation might be interested in supporting ERNOP’s wider mission to advance philanthropy research and make it accessible to those working in, with, and for philanthropy, then why not consider joining as a member:
https://ernop.eu/member-portal/subscription-plan/