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Since 2013, NCRP has honored the best of philanthropy through our NCRP Impact Awards initiative, and since 2019, we’ve used a 10-person Selection Committee to select the winners.

I am excited to announce today the 10 outstanding leaders from across the philanthropic and nonprofit sectors who are tasked with selecting 4 bold funders to receive the 2021 NCRP Impact Awards.

This year’s Impact Award winners will be announced in September, and the awards will take place at the CHANGE Philanthropy Unity Summit in October.

The distinguished members of the 2021 selection committee are:

  • Nikki Brown-Booker, Program Officer, Disability Inclusion Fund, Borealis Philanthropy
  • Jennifer Epps-Addison, Network President and Co-Executive Director, The Center for Popular Democracy and CPD Action
  • Jorge Gutierrez, Executive Director, Familia: Trans Queer Liberation Movement
  • Taryn Higashi, Executive Director, Unbound Philanthropy
  • Daniel Lee, Executive Director, Levi Strauss Foundation (NCRP Board Member)
  • Vivek (Vik) Malhotra, Strategy and Organizational Development Consultant (NCRP Board Member)
  • Sudha Nandagopal, CEO, Social Venture Partners International
  • Shaady Salehi, Director, Trust-Based Philanthropy Project
  • Erik R. Stegman, Executive Director, Native Americans in Philanthropy
  • Tim Wallace, Director of Development, Legal Aid Justice Center

In addition, I will serve as the NCRP staff representatives on the committee.

This year is the second time we’ve used a Selection Committee to choose the winners. Visit NCRP’s website for information on the committee members, including bios.

Recognizing philanthropy’s work supporting social justice movements

Members of the committee will honor awardees in the following 4 award categories:

  • “Mover and Shaker” Award for Bold Peer Organizing
  • “Smashing Silos” Award for Intersectional Grantmaking
  • “Changing Course” Award for Incorporating Feedback
  • “Get Up, Stand Up” Award for Rapid Response

These categories, which debuted at the 2017 edition of the Impact Awards, reflect positive changes in philanthropy, with more funders seriously considering how to fund social justice movements, leveraging their own power for systemic change, and sharing decision-making and governance with marginalized communities. A list of past NCRP Impact Awards winners is available on our website.

See you at the CHANGE Philanthropy Unity Summit

The 2021 Impact Awards will be hosted at the CHANGE Philanthropy Unity Summit, which will take place in October. Sign up for information and updates from the CHANGE network, of which NCRP is a partner.

Stayed tuned for additional Impact Awards updates in the coming weeks!

There is no doubt that this has been a uniquely challenging year for everyone across all sectors and professions, in ways we couldn’t even have fathomed as the year began. 

At NCRP, our work to achieve long-term change and support for under-resourced Black, Indigenous and people of color communities took on new significance this past year, as poverty, health disparities and institutional racism were just some of the long-standing fissures that deeply impacted lives in deadly and unavoidable ways.

Certainly, none of this work would have been remotely possible without the incredible work of our NCRP staff. Like so many people around the nation, they managed to do amazing things amid a pandemic and, in some cases, significant disruptions to their personal lives.  

It is because of their tireless work with our allies and partners that we are privileged enough to be able to enter 2021 with some ambitious plans for holding ourselves and the sector accountable to equitable systemic change.  

From the 2020 Interactive Dashoard: Number of States that Meet or Exeed 1% Demographic Standard of the Report

In 2020, NCRP released an online dashboard of grantmakers that provide the most and least funding for groups serving or led by immigrants and refugees in each state.

What we accomplished in 2020 

Before stepping into the new year, it’s important to take a step back and acknowledge some of the important successes that our collaborations achieved over the past twelve months. Some of those highlights include: 

  • Rapidly Pushing for an Equitable Response to COVID-19: We, along with many of our partner philanthropy serving organizations (PSOs), encouraged increased giving with a focus on equity in response to the pandemic and the lack of racial justice in America. Many foundations responded incredibly well. (See here and here.) 
  • Galvanizing Better Support to Movements: We helped foundations and high-net-worth donors improve how they support movements. Our Movement Investment Project seeks to inform, influence and expand the number of movement funders. In 2020, we focused on the Pro-Immigrant and Refugee Movement, conducting intensive engagement with national and regional PSOs and funders. We also engaged deeply with the movement groups, bringing their voices and experiences into the campaign. In May, we released a new online dashboard that allows users to see which grantmakers in their states provide the most (or the least) funding for groups serving and/or led by immigrants and refugees. 
  • Deeping the Conversation Around Power: We helped hundreds of foundations and donors think critically about how they build, share and wield power. Power Moves (NCRP’s foundation assessment toolkit) continues to be popular, with several foundations publicly releasing the results of their assessments. We also made numerous presentations on the toolkit, which can be found on our events calendar

All of this important work was made possible because of the leadership, vision and trust of our board, the collaboration of our many partners and allies, and with the support of our funders.  

Big plans for 2021 

As we enter our 45th year of existence, NCRP is more committed than ever to playing our role as the sector’s only independent watchdog and its longest serving critical friend. As a result, expect us to:  

  • Expand the Movement Investment Project. We are adding a focus on reproductive access and gendered violence,which will culminate in projects and reports that aim to help movements galvanize funding and intersectionally reframe the public discourse about these issues. Work on the pro-immigrant and refugee movement will continue, as will our work to be responsive to movements in the moment, including the Movement for Black Lives.  
  • Continue to engage the sector with our Power Moves toolkit. We have several presentations planned, and we’ll continue to facilitate peer learning and one-on-one interactions among select foundations to advance their use of the toolkit to change practice. 
  • Honor the sector’s best with the NCRP Impact Awards. Next fall, we’re looking forward to celebrating bold, cutting-edge philanthropy that makes our nation more fair and just. Stay tuned to find out more about this initiative, which will be held at the CHANGE Philanthropy Unity Summit in Minneapolis. 

For 4 decades, we have prided ourselves at producing and presenting credible, evidence-based research that holds a mirror to what philanthropy is doing right and what it needs to correct to do better. However, if there is anything that 2020 has reminded us, it’s that the world depends on us to do more than just present data, stories and solutions. It demands that we move past applauding our intentions and actively using all these tools, without hesitation, to act. 

Philanthropy is filled with a lot of people who want to do good, even if they don’t quite know how to do it. We look forward in 2021 to building on the current spotlight to do good and pushing each other to double down on the investments that need to be made in social, economic and environmental justice.

To continue redefining public safety beyond law enforcement so that we can abolish the various forms of fear and violence that limit not just dreams and potential — but also lives.   

To creating and continuing partnerships that boldly seize on the urgency of now to actively bend the moral arc of our sector toward equitable justice — and love. 

Aaron Dorfman is president and CEO of the National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy. 

The winner of the 2019 “Smashing Silos” NCRP Impact Award is:

Join us in congratulating

  • Marguerite Casey Foundation
    The “Smashing Silos” Award for Intersectional Grantmaking.
    The NCRP Impact Awards Selection Committee chose Marguerite Casey Foundation because of its strong commitment to multi-year, general operating support. They were also impressed by the foundation’s investments in grassroots and community of color-led organizing, and the foundation’s role in developing and sustaining a network of grassroots leaders across the county. 

Spread the inspiration!

You can help encourage grantmakers in your community to aspire for lasting positive impact. Share the news and use it as an example of what’s possible.

 

The NCRP Impact Awards is about inspiring smart philanthropy that empowers communities for lasting positive results. Thank you for helping us make this a reality.

The winner of the 2019 “Mover and Shaker” NCRP Impact Award is:

Join us in congratulating

  • The Libra Foundation
    The “Changing Course” Award for Incorporating Feedback.
    The NCRP Impact Awards Selection Committee chose The Libra Foundation for the “Changing Course” award in recognition of the foundation embracing a stronger racial justice lens and deeper support organizing and movement during the past 2 years. In particular, the committee noted Libra’s streamlining of the application process by taking on the burden of researching and vetting and how it has started interrogating how it invests its endowment. 

Spread the inspiration!

You can help encourage grantmakers in your community to aspire for lasting positive impact. Share the news and use it as an example of what’s possible.

 

The NCRP Impact Awards is about inspiring smart philanthropy that empowers communities for lasting positive results. Thank you for helping us make this a reality.

Libra joins Emergent Fund and Unbound Philanthropy as announced winners of 2019 NCRP Impact Awards.

The winner of the 2019 “Mover and Shaker” NCRP Impact Award is:

Join us in congratulating

  • Unbound Philanthropy
    The “Mover and Shaker” Award for Bold Peer Organizing.
    The NCRP Impact Awards Selection Committee chose Unbound for this award due to its outsize influence in getting peers to think about systemic reform via advocacy, policy change and in the legal sphere. Unbound has organized bigger funders to take risks to support culture change, such as the Pop Culture Collaborative, which uses partnerships between the pop culture and social change sectors to change narratives around marginalized communities. 

2019 Awardee quotes -- Unbound Philanthropy

Spread the inspiration!

You can help encourage grantmakers in your community to aspire for lasting positive impact. Share the news and use it as an example of what’s possible.

 

The NCRP Impact Awards is about inspiring smart philanthropy that empowers communities for lasting positive results. Thank you for helping us make this a reality.

Unbound joins Emergent Fund as announced winners of 2019 NCRP Impact Awards.

We’re excited to announce the first of our 2019 NCRP Impact Awardees:

Join us in congratulating

  • Emergent Fund
    The “Get Up, Stand Up” Award for Bold Rapid Response.
    This rapid response fund created following the November 2016 presidential election is being honored for its open, steamlined grant applicalation and participatory, activist-driven decision-making process. The NCRP Impact Awards Selection Committee was impressed by the unique nature of the collaborative that created Emergent Fund and how the fund is supporting grantees that other funders hesitate to support due to misconceptions about risk. 

Spread the inspiration!

You can help encourage grantmakers in your community to aspire for lasting positive impact. Share the news and use it as an example of what’s possible.

 

The NCRP Impact Awards is about inspiring smart philanthropy that empowers communities for lasting positive results. Thank you for helping us make this a reality.