Birmingham Change Fund
Birmingham, Alabama
HERITAGE QUILTERS
Warrenton, North Carolina
According to a report issued by
the Forum of Regional Associations of Grantmakers, giving circles have become a major force in philanthropy, raising over $100 million. What are giving circles? They "involve a group of friends who pool their charitable donations and decide together how to use the money to benefit the causes they care most about."
Giving circles have traditionally been thought of as a philanthropic approach used mainly by women, but that is increasingly no longer the case.
For background on giving circles, including information on how to form one, see the Forum's information below.
Resources on Giving Circles:Report: Giving Circles Are Here to Stay by the Forum of Regional Associations of Grantmakers (the nation affiliate of the Ohio Grantmakers Forum).
More Giving Together: THE GROWTH AND IMPACT of GIVING CIRCLES and SHARED GIVINGA report researched and written by Jessica E. Bearman for the Forum of Regional Associations of Grantmakers
The Joy of Philanthropy:
My Giving Circle Friends and I Find That You Don't Have to Be Oprah to Make a Difference (The author of the article joined a giving circle sponsored by the Washington Area Women's Foundation)
A Circle With a Deep Center:
Black Women Pool Resources in Grass-Roots Effort to Alleviate D.C.'s Social Ills
Community Investment NetworkThe Community Investment Network works with young adult African Americans in the American South to focus how they engage and give back to their communities. This work has yielded nine giving circles.
African American Womens Giving Circle: Founded in 2004, the African American Women’s Giving Circle (AAWGC) is a charitable fund established out of The Women’s Foundation. The circle includes 15-25 women who have each made a financial commitment of $2,000 or more over a two-year period and agreed to work together as part of a shared grantmaking and learning experience.