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In this episode we take a deep dive into the relationship between philanthropy and social justice. Does philanthropy necessarily deliver social justice; does it only do so under certain conditions, or does it sometimes actively get in the way of social justice?

Including:

  • Philanthropy as an individual act vs philanthropy as a societal mechanism, and why this creates a tension between emphasis on individual liberty and emphasis on justice.
  • How changes in the understanding of property during the Enlightenment changed our understanding of charity.
  • The emergence of a radical new notion of social justice and a critique of charity.
  • The growth of contrasting ideas about property ownership that led to a new notion of “discriminating charity”, and why this became so influential during the C19th.
  • The influence of these ideas on Andrew Carnegie’s “Gospel of Wealth” and why that was so pivotal.
  • Philanthropy as “riot insurance”.
  • Does justice demand that we replace philanthropy with taxation, or can the two coexist?
  • Why are some philanthropist campaigning for higher taxes?
  • The history of the philanthropist as “agitator”
  • Philanthropy and social movements: recipe for justice, or uneasy bedfellows?
  • Radical philanthropy: history and current context.

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Learn from our past to better understand our future.

Philanthropy has a long and varied history. We’ve created bite-size chapters that you can jump in and out of to better understand philanthropy.