A Comparative Analysis of Corporate and Independent Foundations

Notwithstanding some visible debates, systematic evidence about the implications of greater corporate involvement in the social sector is sparse. We provide some of this evidence by examining one channel of corporate influence within the nonprofit sector–company sponsorship of philanthropic foundati...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Justin Koushyar, Wesley Longhofer, Peter W. Roberts
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Society for Sociological Science 2015-12-01
Series:Sociological Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.sociologicalscience.com/articles-v2-28-582/
id doaj-119de5004a85490994e8330544900808
record_format Article
spelling doaj-119de5004a85490994e83305449008082020-11-24T23:39:28ZengSociety for Sociological ScienceSociological Science2330-66962330-66962015-12-0122858259610.15195/v2.a283059A Comparative Analysis of Corporate and Independent FoundationsJustin Koushyar0Wesley Longhofer1Peter W. Roberts2 Emory University Emory University Emory University Notwithstanding some visible debates, systematic evidence about the implications of greater corporate involvement in the social sector is sparse. We provide some of this evidence by examining one channel of corporate influence within the nonprofit sector–company sponsorship of philanthropic foundations. Our analysis shows that corporate foundations raise more funds and distribute grants with lower overhead than similar independent (i.e., non-corporate) foundations. However, their grantmaking is also more dispersed and less relational, and they tend to be governed by more ephemeral groups of officers and trustees. These findings suggest that corporate foundations benefit from having access to the resources of the companies that sponsor them but are constrained by their additional market-based motivations. The findings also update and refine what nonprofits might expect from corporate foundations relative to their more traditional independent counterparts.https://www.sociologicalscience.com/articles-v2-28-582/Corporate PhilanthropyFoundationsOrganizations
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Justin Koushyar
Wesley Longhofer
Peter W. Roberts
spellingShingle Justin Koushyar
Wesley Longhofer
Peter W. Roberts
A Comparative Analysis of Corporate and Independent Foundations
Sociological Science
Corporate Philanthropy
Foundations
Organizations
author_facet Justin Koushyar
Wesley Longhofer
Peter W. Roberts
author_sort Justin Koushyar
title A Comparative Analysis of Corporate and Independent Foundations
title_short A Comparative Analysis of Corporate and Independent Foundations
title_full A Comparative Analysis of Corporate and Independent Foundations
title_fullStr A Comparative Analysis of Corporate and Independent Foundations
title_full_unstemmed A Comparative Analysis of Corporate and Independent Foundations
title_sort comparative analysis of corporate and independent foundations
publisher Society for Sociological Science
series Sociological Science
issn 2330-6696
2330-6696
publishDate 2015-12-01
description Notwithstanding some visible debates, systematic evidence about the implications of greater corporate involvement in the social sector is sparse. We provide some of this evidence by examining one channel of corporate influence within the nonprofit sector–company sponsorship of philanthropic foundations. Our analysis shows that corporate foundations raise more funds and distribute grants with lower overhead than similar independent (i.e., non-corporate) foundations. However, their grantmaking is also more dispersed and less relational, and they tend to be governed by more ephemeral groups of officers and trustees. These findings suggest that corporate foundations benefit from having access to the resources of the companies that sponsor them but are constrained by their additional market-based motivations. The findings also update and refine what nonprofits might expect from corporate foundations relative to their more traditional independent counterparts.
topic Corporate Philanthropy
Foundations
Organizations
url https://www.sociologicalscience.com/articles-v2-28-582/
work_keys_str_mv AT justinkoushyar acomparativeanalysisofcorporateandindependentfoundations
AT wesleylonghofer acomparativeanalysisofcorporateandindependentfoundations
AT peterwroberts acomparativeanalysisofcorporateandindependentfoundations
AT justinkoushyar comparativeanalysisofcorporateandindependentfoundations
AT wesleylonghofer comparativeanalysisofcorporateandindependentfoundations
AT peterwroberts comparativeanalysisofcorporateandindependentfoundations
_version_ 1725513462894821376