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Emily Koons Jae: Executive Director of ACTA’s Fund for Academic Renewal
Emily Koons Jae serves as Director of the Fund for Academic Renewal (FAR), a program of ACTA that works closely...
A group of trustees and alumni who favor traditional curricula has released a new guidebook designed to help donors make “intelligent” gifts.
Described in a news release as “the first book designed to show donors how to avoid pitfalls in their college giving,” The Intelligent Donor’s Guide to College Giving advocates a free-market approach to higher-education philanthropy. “You should be as wise a shopper in your higher education giving as you are in selecting a stock or mutual funds,” the guidebook says.
Among other things, it explains how donors can control how their gifts are spent. They can give to a specific program or create their own, the book says, and state the purpose of their gifts in writing. The authors also advise donors to find faculty members who will advocate the projects that the benefactors wish to support. Donors should even be willing to go to court, the book says, to insure that institutions do not misuse their gifts.
The book was written by Jerry L. Martin, president of the American Council of Trustees and Alumni, and Anne D. Neal, vice-president and general counsel of the organization. Since its founding, in 1995, the council has been part of a debate over the role that donors and trustees should play in shaping curricula at colleges and universities.
Emily Koons Jae serves as Director of the Fund for Academic Renewal (FAR), a program of ACTA that works closely...
A few weeks ago, Ken Griffin’s $300 million contribution to Harvard University inspired an op-ed in Inside Philanthropy calling on universities to be more circumspect in allowing naming rights. Named gifts are easy targets for criticism, and many wealthy donors have been accused of making charitable contributions out of mere vanity or as a Quixotic attempt to cheat death.
My research is focused on the complexity of the philanthropy space – how to understand and navigate it. There is far more to private giving for the public good than most people realize, but I also do not want people to feel overwhelmed.
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