Robert Putnam's latest research begins to show the limits of the social capital concept, to put it kindly.
Continue reading "Discounting Social Capital" »
A successful school for working adults provides an example of why legal compliance doesn't eliminate risks in charity governance.
Continue reading "Sidebar: Cambridge College and the Risks of Governance" »
Some in the legal profession seem to be stuck in an obsolete paradigm of compliance, transparency, and good board governance for nonprofits—while the accounting profession (and Sarbanes-Oxley) advocates a holistic approach with an integrated system of internal controls as its centerpiece.
Continue reading "Be Wary of Lawyers Bearing Best Practices" »
The USAID Partner Vetting Program wants specifics on who is receiving aid using their funds, but just in the West Bank and Gaza—for now. The proposal highlights the curious variability in the expectations of transparency—one organization advocating for vetting doesn't turn up in databases of registered nonprofit organizations.
Continue reading "USAID Kicks Associates & Takes Names" »
Alaskans are unusually generous—or there's something else going on—for an embezzler to make off with $75,000 from local chapters of two name-brand charities.
Continue reading "Unusually Large Charity Fraud—in Alaska!" »
Product placement in a comic strip puts the focus on a well-promoted online charity venture. But a look at the financial statements suggests that there may be bottlenecks ahead as the organization tries to scale up.
Continue reading "Doonesbury Plugs DonorsChoose" »
Hitching a charity's reputation to a single individual is a high-risk strategy that pays off—until it doesn't.
Continue reading "Jerry Lewis & Don Imus: The Downside of Charity-Celebrity Co-Dependency" »
Tax exempt charities provide consulting services for athletes and their teams who want to give back. We take a look at the curious example they set.
Continue reading "Help for Pro Sports Teams and Athletes in Need (of Advice)" »