2013
DOI: 10.1111/faam.12020
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The Impossibility of Philanthropic Funding Decisions: The Australian Non‐Government Funder Experience

Abstract: Non-government funders (NGFs) are major contributors to the third sector. Literature on this private philanthropic world is limited and access to stakeholders and practices within these institutions is a barrier to empirical research. With public oversight limited to nominal federal tax law disclosure, issues of accountability are under-researched. We examine how NGFs 'account' for their grant making decisions in an Australian context. Focused on how NGFs assess likely success, it finds that assurance is const… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(22 citation statements)
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“…Similar concerns, that downwards stakeholders are ignored, apply when Philanthropists fund projects without considering community's interests (Coyte et al, 2013;Leat, 2004). Many Philanthropist CSOs fail to draw on community knowledge when grant-making (Botetzagias & Koutiva, 2014;Delfin & Tang, 2006;Tomei, 2013).…”
Section: 'To Whom' Accountability Is Owedmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Similar concerns, that downwards stakeholders are ignored, apply when Philanthropists fund projects without considering community's interests (Coyte et al, 2013;Leat, 2004). Many Philanthropist CSOs fail to draw on community knowledge when grant-making (Botetzagias & Koutiva, 2014;Delfin & Tang, 2006;Tomei, 2013).…”
Section: 'To Whom' Accountability Is Owedmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…amateur sports clubs, local orchestras). Trusts/Grantors (Philanthropist CSOs): are essential to the CSO sectors’ on‐going sustainability. They include self‐funded, company sponsored or community funded trusts/foundations whose major revenue is investment returns (≈92%); from which they make philanthropic grants (Cordery et al., ; Coyte, Rooney, & Phua, ; Leat, ). Nevertheless, given they are largely private institutions receiving tax concessions, some question their accountability (Irvin, ; Jung & Harrow, ; Tomei, ). Service Providers: mainly receive revenues from delivering goods and services (≈72%) (Cordery et al., ) in the health, legal, museum and theatre sectors and international aid (Brown & Moore, ; DiMaggio & Anheier, ).…”
Section: Categorising Csosmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The study reveals that institutionalised accounting information cannot be taken for granted to prevail in the circuits of power in negotiating a procurement offer between a government and a service-providing non-profit organisation. Coyte et al (2013) deals with a grant application assessment process in Australian non-government funders organisations (NGF). NGF accountability is socialised in contrast to the hierarchical accountability preferred by government funders and individual philanthropic donors.…”
Section: (2) Accounting and Powermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Coyte et al () deals with a grant application assessment process in Australian non‐government funders organisations (NGF). NGF accountability is socialised in contrast to the hierarchical accountability preferred by government funders and individual philanthropic donors.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%