2008
Charities
    2008
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2007 Charities
  1. Abby Kelley Foster House, Inc.
  2. ACCESS - Action Center for Educational Services & Scholarships
  3. Angkor Dance Troupe, Inc.
  4. Asian American Civic Association
  5. Asperger's Association of New England, Inc.
  6. Barnstable Land Trust, Inc.
  7. The Boston Camerata
  8. Boston Center for Independent Living, Inc.
  9. Boston Children's Chorus
  10. Boston Landmarks Orchestra
  11. Boys & Girls Club of Lawrence
  12. Bread of Life
  13. Cambridge Forum, Inc.
  14. Cancer Research Fund - VHL Alliance
  15. Cape Cod Repertory Theatre Company, Inc. d/b/a Cape Rep Theatre
  16. Centro Presente
  17. Chameleon Arts Ensemble of Boston
  18. Children's Advocacy Center of Norfolk County
  19. Children's Cove - The Cape and Islands Child Advocacy Center
  20. Codman Academy Foundation on behalf of Codman Academy Charter Public School
  21. Community Day Center of Waltham, Inc.
  22. Countdown to Kindergarten
  23. Dorchester Community Center for the Visual Arts
  24. Duffy Health Center, Inc.
  25. Educational Development Group, Inc
  26. Employment Options, Inc.
  27. Essex National Heritage Commission
  28. The Family Self-Sufficiency Center
  29. Fitchburg Cultural Alliance, Inc
  30. Franklin County Dial/Self, Inc. (aka DIAL/SELF)
  31. Franklin Park Coalition
  32. Girls Incorporated of Greater Lowell
  33. Golden Tones, Inc.
  34. Grassroots International
  35. greenGoat
  36. Hancock Shaker Village
  37. The Helen Berube Teen Parent Program
  38. Homes for Families
  39. Inquilinos Boricuas en Accion (IBA)
  40. Ipswich River Watershed Association
  41. Legal Advocacy and Resource Center, Inc.
  42. Legal Assistance Corporation of Central Massachusetts
  43. Light of Cambodian Children, Inc.
  44. The Literacy Project
  45. Little Brothers-Friends of the Elderly
  46. Massachusetts Coalition for the Prevention of Medical Errors, Inc.
  47. Massachusetts Institute for a New Commonwealth (MassINC)
  48. Massachusetts Public Health Association
  49. Massachusetts Smart Growth Alliance
  50. Max Warburg Courage Curriculum
  51. Medicine Wheel Productions, Inc.
  52. Metropolitan Wind Symphony, Inc. (MWS)
  53. Nantucket Sustainable Development Corporation d/b/a Sustainable Nantucket
  54. National Immigration Project of the National Lawyers Guild
  55. Neighborhood Association of the Back Bay
  56. New England Complex Systems Institute
  57. New Entry Sustainable Farming Project
  58. New Sector Alliance
  59. Norman B. Leventhal Map Center at the Boston Public Library
  60. Northampton Survival Center, Inc.
  61. Our Space Our Place, Inc.
  62. Planning Office for Urban Affairs, Inc.
  63. Pro-Choice Massachusetts Foundation
  64. Reader To Reader, Inc.
  65. The Revolving Museum
  66. Riverside Theatre Works
  67. Sabre Foundation, Inc.
  68. Safe Passage, Inc.
  69. Shakespeare on the Cape
  70. Shepherd's Center of Fall River, Inc.
  71. Somerville Homeless Coalition, Inc.
  72. Somerville Museum
  73. South Africa Development Fund
  74. South Coast Chamber Music Society
  75. StageSource
  76. Stoneham Theatre
  77. Triboro Youth Theatre, Inc.
  78. The Trust for Public Land
  79. Urban Edge Housing Corporation
  80. USS Constitution Museum Foundation, Inc.
  81. Veteran Hospice Homestead Inc.
  82. Volunteer Lawyers for the Arts of Massachusetts, Inc.
  83. Worcester County Food Bank, Inc.
  84. Worcester Youth Center, Inc.
  85. WriteBoston
  86. X-Cel, Inc.
  87. The Yard, Inc.
  88. Young Entrepreneurs Society, Inc.
  89. Youth Advocacy Foundation, Inc.

INTERNATIONAL

report from the field:

International Philanthropy

International philanthropy has traditionally accounted for only 2-3% of charitable giving in the United States, but with increased globalization, communication and cooperation among peoples, there is more interest and opportunity today than ever before. There are two main channels: giving directly to foreignbased organizations, and giving to US-based international programs. These have recently been impacted by several developments: the post 9-11 world of more stringent regulations around direct, cross-border giving; the emergence of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation as by far the largest US international grantmaking foundation; the innovative and strategic leveraging of the Clinton Foundation; and, the celebrity goodwill ambassadors (e.g. Carter, Bono, Geldof, Brangelina) whose various initiatives (e.g. AIDS in Africa), leveraged by the media, are mobilizing individual donors.

International philanthropy is structured around the same kinds of fields and issues we find in domestic philanthropy—the environment, culture, and human services. Some of their particular expressions, however, are more extreme abroad, owing to radical differences in culture, economic development, and environmental conditions. Examples are public health crises, deep poverty, genocide, human and women’s rights, long-term community and civic development, as well as refugee care, disasters, and humanitarian relief. Massive as these problems are, opportunities for effecting change in the international arena are now readily available through philanthropy. Donors can develop their own foreign policies by creating portfolios of international philanthropic investments that express and support their own visions of a better world.

There are several important differences to bear in mind between domestic and international giving. First, scales of goals and accomplishments can differ from those of domestic programs. Funds channeled through US-based global programs incur operating and administrative costs over and above those needed in domestic operations. Challenges that confront international programs in war-torn countries, environmentally devastated regions, or displaced refugee communities can be difficult to anticipate and handle. Unforeseen contingencies abound. Experience gained and lessons learned by donors in domestic philanthropy may or may not apply to foreign situations, owing to these differences. Certainly philanthropic experience helps donors to be attentive and responsive to grantees and their situations, but proven solutions to domestic problems are not necessarily ‘best practices’ abroad. Understanding cultural, social, religious, economic, political, legal and even technological conditions in which funds will be used abroad requires research and self-education. Third party interests, government bureaucracies, and even international politics can also heavily impact outcomes. Nonetheless, opportunities in international philanthropy have never been greater or more far-reaching, nor the needs more urgent, than they are now.

Rachel A. Bird Anderson
Former International Public Health Practitioner

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