FOUNDATION FUNDING FOR ENVIRONMENTAL ADVOCACY
Updated: August 09, 2004
A Research Project funded by the
Nonprofit Sector Research Fund, The Aspen Institute
One Dupont Circle, N.W. Suite 700
Washington DC 20036
J. Craig Jenkins
Dept. of Sociology
Ohio State University
238 Townshend Hall
1885 Neil Avenue Mall
Columbus OH 43210
614 292-1411
Jenkins.12@sociology.osu.edu
Project
email:
greenmoney@osu.edu.
Robert J. Brulle
Dept. of Culture and Communication
Drexel University
3141 Chestnut St.
Philadelphia PA 19104
215 895-2294
brullerj@drexel.edu
Project Dates: September 1, 2003-January 31, 2005
PROJECT SUMMARY
Private foundations have long provided core funding for environmental advocacy,
making the environmental movement organizationally one of the stronger sectors
of contemporary civil society. Yet critics argue that the environmental
movement lacks political clout because of an overemphasis on organization-building
and professional advocacy at the expense of grassroots organizing. In our
past research, we have shown that foundation funding has largely gone to
moderate discourses and professionalized advocacy (Brulle 2000; Brulle and
Jenkins Forthcoming; Jenkins 1989, 1999, 2001). This research builds on
this by addressing three questions:
- What determines foundation funding priorities? While most
foundations favor moderate discourses and professional organizations, some
favor alternative discourses and grassroots strategies. Why? What practices
are associated with these funding strategies?
- How do foundation funding priorities affect environmental advocacy?
Does foundation funding actually reduce grassroots environmental activity?
How can foundations influence environmental organizations to adopt desired
program activities?
- What is the policy impact of foundation funding? What is
the policy impact of the advocacy projects funded by foundations? How can
foundations modify their funding strategies to better realize their goals?
To examine these questions, we will collect data on foundation practices
and funding strategies for 1960-2000 and see how these are related to environmental
political action and its impact on national public policy. The results
will be disseminated to researchers interested in private philanthropy studies,
social movements and environmental studies as well as to foundation managers
and trustees, environmental advocacy groups and the general public. Information
about the project as well as the resulting data and reports will be distributed
through a public website as well as through conference presentations, professional
publications and articles written for philanthropy professionals.
FOUNDATION FUNDING FOR ENVIRONMENTAL ADVOCACY
A prominent criticism of the environmental movement is that its political
clout is limited by an overemphasis on organization building at the expense
of grassroots organizing. Critics often claim that foundation support for
professional advocacy and limited support for grassroots activities contributes
to an organizationally strong but politically weak environmental movement
(Snow 1991; Dowie 1995). This contention, however, is not based on systematic
empirical research and there has been little investigation of the overall
pattern of environmental philanthropy. In earlier work on social movement
philanthropy at large, Jenkins (1989, 1998, 2001; Jenkins and Halcli 1999)
found that since the early 1960s, foundation funding has shifted generally
from grassroots to professional advocacy and that alternative foundations
(public charities with donee giving boards [cf. Ostrander 1995]) are the
most distinctive funders, investing more of their support in grassroots activities.
Environmental advocacy has been one of the leading growth areas in social
movement philanthropy. Brulle (2000; also Jordan and Mulroney 1997; Shaiko
1999) shows that foundation funding makes up a quarter of the budgets of
the major national environmental organizations, which often gives foundations
significant leverage over advocacy programs. Most funding is project support,
which gives funders a significant say over what types of advocacy occur.
Brulle and Jenkins (Forthcoming) examine foundation support for environmental
discourses in 2000, finding a strong preference for moderate environmental
discourses as well as professional advocacy organizations.
MAJOR RESEARCH QUESTIONS. Our major concern is what leads to foundation
funding strategies and the impact of these on environmental advocacy and
public policy? Figure 1 below outlines our hypotheses for addressing these
questions:
Foundation Characteristics -----> Foundation
-----> Environmental NGO's ---->
Environmental Policy
Funding
Strategies Program Activities
Impact
1. Assets 1. Issue
Focus 1. Discourse Focus
1. Legal Changes
2. Staff Professionalism 2. Grassroots/Professional
2. Organizational Resources i. Bills Introduced/adopted
3. Type of Foundation Advocacy
3. Movement Actions/Tactics ii. Treaties Adopted
4. Annual Giving – Total 3. Size of Program
4. Grassroots/Professional 2. Implementation:
Agency
4.
Program/Project Support Advocacy
Funding & Personnel
Figure 1: FOUNDATIONS AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY
This scheme addresses several problems with past research. First,
our own earlier work may have seriously underestimated the extent of grassroots
environmental funding. Jenkins’ earlier studies missed the funding for
several of the longstanding environmental organizations by focusing on grants
to organizations founded after 1965. The environmental movement dates to
the late 19th century and, by our estimate, currently includes over 1,300
major NGOs that will be identified by our project. Second, little is known
about why foundations follow different funding strategies. In earlier work,
we found that alternative and community foundations were more grassroots,
corporate and large institutional foundations preferred professional advocacy,
and family foundations were highly variable (Jenkins 1998; Jenkins and Halcli
1999). More dramatic is the general preference for moderate environmental
discourses with alternative foundations being the major funders of environmental
justice and other non-traditional discourses (Brulle and Jenkins Forthcoming).
Does this hold across time? Are other factors, such as “slack resources”
and staff professionalism, important?
Third is the impact of this funding. Jenkins and Eckert (1986) found
that foundation funding for the civil rights movement was largely reactive,
professionalizing advocacy but primarily on issues already framed by earlier
grassroots activity. Does this apply in the environmental area? Or have
foundations been innovators in terms of issues and projects? What is the
impact of foundation funding on the structure, discourse and issue focus
of environmental advocacy? Fourth is the impact of this advocacy on public
policy. In the civil rights movement, foundation support came after the
major policy changes and was largely invested in legal advocacy and service
programs critical to implementing these policies (Jenkins and Eckert 1986;
Jenkins 1989). Does this hold with the environmental movement, which has
a far more diverse constituency, a larger array of organizations and, on
many public issues, far more powerful political opponents?
To address these questions, we will collect five decades of data (1960,
1970, 1980, 1990 and 2000) on foundation funding of environmental advocacy
and its policy impact. By focusing on five decade-based panels, we simplify
our data collection while maintaining our ability to capture change. We
also build on existing annualized data that we have already collected, allowing
us to focus more on actual analysis and the dissemination of results. We
begin first with the roots of foundation funding strategies and then turn
to its impact on environmental advocacy and public policy.
Foundation Practices and Funding Strategies: Why do foundations
adopt particular funding strategies? Our first focus is explaining foundation
funding strategies and their relationship to different forms of political
advocacy. By political advocacy, we include both “rights-based” and “civic
involvement” advocacy (Boris and Mosher-Williams 1998). We also distinguish
between professional and grassroots advocacy, the latter meaning organizations
with chapter memberships and/or community organizing where members can potentially
influence organizational policies. We also look at organizational governance,
distinguishing democratic and semi-democratic from oligarchic organizations,
and examine eight major environmental discourses (Brulle 2000). Our prediction
is that discourse is the major differentiating element in foundation strategy
because of its close connection with specific goals, and that a pattern
similar to our 2000 findings with respect to foundation type will hold across
time. The novel area will be evaluating the importance of foundation professionalism,
which should promote professional advocacy funding, and “slack resources”
in terms of assets and total giving, which should facilitate experimentation
with alternative discourses and advocacy projects. We will also use grant
size and multi-year grants to distinguish project from program support.
Finally, we suspect that few foundations are particularly cognizant of governance
questions or attend greatly to the “grassroots” vs. professional distinction,
which should be evident from weak and inconsistent effects of foundation
characteristics on these aspects of environmental funding.
Funding Strategies and Environmental NGOs: Our second focus
is the impact of foundation funding on environmental advocacy. As noted,
foundation grants typically make up a quarter of the budget of the major
national environmental organizations but have far greater leverage because
of: (1) less diffuseness than, e.g. “direct mail” contributors; (2) foundation
preference for targeted project grants and ability to monitor outcomes; (3)
the general weakness of internal member controls over policies; and (4) interorganizational
exchange in terms of shared boards (Colwell 1993:105). Critics argue that,
although professionalization is often imperative in legal and scientific
advocacy, it has become so overwhelmingly dominant that it has undermined
the mobilization of effective public support for environmental protection.
Our first step is to evaluate trends in environmental advocacy and
links to foundation funding. By analyzing comprehensive organizational data
on the changing mix of environmental organizations and environmental political
action (described below), we examine the impact of foundation funding on
the environmental movement. Has foundation funding encouraged changes in
environmental discourse? Has it promoted professional advocacy at the expense
of grassroots organizing? Has it centralized the environmental movement?
Has it promoted democratic over oligarchic organization?
Foundation Funding, Environmental NGOs, and Policy
Impact. Our fourth focus is the impact of environmental advocacy on
national environmental policy. Unfortunately we do not have the resources
to examine local environmental advocacy, which is important to a comprehensive
evaluation of environmental policy. We can, however, assess the national
policy impact of environmental advocacy and specifically the sectors most
supported by foundations. Foundations work to realize many of their goals
indirectly by shaping the issue focus and practices of NGOs. To ensure the
efficacy of their funding strategies, foundation managers need to understand
the relationship between the practices of NGOs that they seek to engender
and the impact of these NGOs on the policy process. A core proposition of
social movement theory is that organizational centralization, narrow goals,
disruptive tactics and favorable political opportunities contribute to favorable
political outcomes (Gamson 1975; Jenkins 1985; Staggenborg 1991; Amenta,
Carruthers and Zylan 1992; Amenta, Dunleavy and Bernstein 1994). Others
counter that (1) decentralized networks are better able to survive repression
and maximize grassroots participation (Gerlach and Hine 1970), (2) favorable
public opinion is the key mediating factor behind favorable movement outcomes
(Burstein and Linton 2002), (3) although protest may perform a signaling
function by getting issues on the political agenda, it stimulates a negative
public opinion backlash (Burstein and Freudenberg 1978; Burstein 1999),
(4) victimization by police violence enlists favorable public opinion and
thereby contributes to favorable policy (Barkan 1984; McAdam and Su 2002),
and (5) informational lobbying is critical to influencing public policy
(Berry 1999). There is also the longstanding debate over the political
impact of foundation funding. Foundation funding goes largely to the moderate
professional advocacy organizations (Brulle and Jenkins Forthcoming), leading
to the claim that this channels the movement into moderate and less effective
activities (Snow 1991; Jordan and Maloney 1997). Berry (1977, 1999) argues,
however, that this constitutes a strategic response by political entrepreneurs
and foundations to the free-rider problems of public interest movements,
leading to a “thin” but still effective popular mobilization. We focus
our investigation on whether the funding of “grassroots” and non-mainstream
organizations is more effective than funding moderate professional advocacy
organizations. We also examine the relationship between NGO strategies and
tactics, and specific policy outcomes.
RESEARCH METHODS. To examine these questions, we will gather data
and conduct analyses of five decade-based panels (1960, 1970, 1980, 1990
and 2000) plus, where appropriate, annualized data. This will enable us
to economize on our data collection while making inferences about change.
There are four specific tasks:
1. Environmental NGO Panel Series, 1960-2000. The first step will
be to identify the population of environmental organizations that were in
existence starting in 1960, and the four following decades following using
the methodology developed in Brulle (2000). For each of the five time series
samples, we will also collect information regarding the characteristics
of environmental organizations as to annual income, membership, and staff
levels, as well as the nature of their environmental programs, including
specifically: (1) issue focus; (2) strategy (professional advocacy, membership,
community organizing, hybrids); (3) tactics (policy advocacy, service &
education, institutional tactics/protests); (4) governance (democratic,
semi-democratic, oligarchic), (5) extent of professionalization (staff size),
and (6) range of programs. This will provide five panels of data for 1960-2000.
From other projects, Jenkins has already constructed an environmental organization
database identifying all organizations listed in the cumulative editions
of the Encyclopedia of Associations (1957-1995). This needs to be
refined by: (1) expanding the coverage of NGOs by consulting the newer editions
of the Encyclopedia and by adding NGOs listed in the National Wildlife Federation’s
Conservation Directory; (2) coding the governance structure of these NGOs
by consulting their by-laws filed with the IRS; (3) recording information
on decade specific income, membership, staff and programs as available from
the Encyclopedia and the Conservation Directory; and (4) gauging
their major revenue sources as reported in their IRS 990 reports. Steps
2 and 4 will be limited to a 10 percent sample representative of the environmental
discourses, strategies and budgets. By-laws and financial information will
be gathered either directly from the National Center for Charitable Statistics
(Krehely 2001), or by writing the IRS. These will yield a data set of national
environmental organizations that will be studied over the 1960-2000 time
period. The methods used to develop this data set are available at
http://www.pages.drexel.edu/~brullerj/Envorgdata.htm
2. Foundation Funding for Environmental Advocacy 1960-2000. Based
on this listing of national environmental SMOs, we will then obtain foundation
grant amounts to all of these organizations for each of the five time samples.
This will allow us to judge the relative and absolute contribution of foundations
to the environmental movement over time, and to identify those types of
organizations that receive significant foundation funding. Also, in an
expansion of previous studies, we will also be able to identify those environmental
NGOs that received no foundation funding at all. In the earlier work, Jenkins
restricted the environmental list to organizations founded after 1965.
In our study of foundation grants for 2000 (Brulle and Jenkins Forthcoming),
we relied on the all grants identified as focused on the environment in the
Foundation Center’s Dialogue database and coded foundation characteristics
using the membership of the National Network of Grantmakers, which constituted
over half of all these grants. We will expand the 1960-1980 grants data
by using our NGO list as well as the relevant issue categories for grants
listed in the Foundation News and, for 1990 and 2000, those listed in the
Foundation Center’s Dialogue database. Because the Foundation Center data
represent only grants of $5000 or more ($10,000 or more after 1990), we supplement
this with a review of the 990 PF’s of smaller foundations included in the
National Network of Grantmakers (2001) which identify the environment as
a funding priority. Adding to our existing data, each foundation will be
coded as to its type: (1) family (inferred from having one or more donor
family members on the board); (2) institutional (i.e. no family on the board);
(3) corporate; (4) community; (5) public charity; and (6) alternative foundation
(donee grants board). We will also collect from the Foundation Directory
and the NNG directory the assets, annual giving, and staff size of these
foundations for our decades. Phone calls will be used to complete missing
information. Combined with our environmental organizational data, this will
allow us to examine the trend in foundation funding for environmental advocacy,
the types of organizations supported, and the foundation practices that lead
to particular funding strategies.
3. Environmental Movement Action 1960-2000. The third data-gathering
task is to refine the environmental movement action data coded by Jenkins
from the New York Times Index. The objective is to gauge the extent
to which foundation funding in, e.g. 1960, was associated with the pattern
of environmental action. This data set will provide measures of movement
activity by counting basic event forms, including symbolic events (speeches,
press releases, conferences & meetings), organizational formation, membership
campaigns, lobbying, electioneering, litigation, protests, and violent protests.
Events are coded in terms of actor (including NGO names), event form, target
and issue. Initial coding has already been completed for 1955-1997 in a
daily events file but needs additional cross checks for missed Index headings
and to be extended to 2000. Since our action data include organizational
identifiers, we can also evaluate the extent to which this is linked to organization-specific
action and the proportions of professional vs. grassroots action.
4. Policy Change 1960-2000. Our final focus is examining the environmental
policy adoption and implementation measures assembled by the Policy Agendas
Project. Based on a comprehensive coding of Congressional activity, the
Agendas data provides bi-annual Congressional term measures of environmental
laws introduced and passed, treaties ratified, and, to gauge implementation,
the personnel and budget authority of federal agencies responsible for environmental
enforcement. Our question is quite simple: What has been the impact of
the environmental movement across decades? Is this related to foundation
funding and associated patterns of environmental organization and activity?
Using annual as well as decade units of observation, we will assess the extent
to which foundation funding and environmental movement action have influenced
the introduction and passage of environmental legislation and policy implementation.
We will also statistically control for other possible contributors: (1)
the partisan composition of Congress; (2) the Presidential party and electoral
margin; (3) “crisis” incidents (e.g. Three Mile Island, the Exxon Valdez
oil spill); and (4) the general status of the national economy gauged by
real GDP/capita and inflation.
PRODUCTS AND IMPACT. This project has both theoretical and practical
research objectives. On the theory end, it will go beyond current ad hoc
claims about the intentions and impact of foundation funding for social
movements to actually examine the pattern of foundation funding for the
environmental movement and the policy impact of that movement. Current
discussions are enmired in critiques of philanthropy or limited to the “ideal-real”
counterfactual analysis of the limitations of the environmental movement.
These discussions often do not recognize the complexity of what foundations
actually fund or of environmental movement strategy. By building systematic
data on each step in this process, we will provide a systematic basis for
gauging the extent and sources of foundation funding for environmental advocacy
and the policy impact of this advocacy. The project will not be able to
gauge the broader potentials of environmental action or probe the depths
of philanthropic motive but will provide systematic evidence on how foundation
funding has influenced the development of the environmental movement and
how effective that movement has been in changing public policies. We see
this as a first major step towards a broader assessment of the impact of
foundation funding for environmental advocacy. We anticipate the publication
of several professional research articles in major academic journals, such
as the American Journal of Sociology and the American Sociological
Review, several articles for philanthropic and practitioner audiences,
and the core basis for a monograph.
Our primary audience for these efforts will be scholars of social
movements, philanthropy and environmental studies. Our work will help evaluate
contemporary resource mobilization/political process theories of social
movements by bringing in a strong cultural element into the analysis in
our handling of the multiplicity of discourses in the environmental movement.
It will also provide an historical basis for discussion and generate invaluable
new data that can be used by other scholars. It will also inform philanthropy
studies by providing a longitudinal picture of the sources of foundation
funding strategies and an assessment of the policy impact of different funding
strategies. It will contribute to environmental studies a better picture
of the nature of environmental mobilization, the way in which philanthropy
influences this, and the impact of environment mobilization on the development
of public policy.
The second audience is foundation trustees and managers as well environmental
advocates and the general public. Foundations often conduct internal evaluations
of their programs but have only a general sense of whether these efforts
payoff in terms of public policy or environmental protection. Internal evaluations
are often ad hoc and internal, raising questions about the independence
of the evaluation. Our approach is to develop systematic quantitative evidence
about what funded what, what impact this had on movement activity, and what
impact movement activity had on public policy. While limited to a particular
slice of the environmental movement, it will provide information about the
impact of foundation funding on the development and impact of the environmental
movement on national public policy. It should help answer questions about
the wisdom of different funding strategies and the impact of foundation
funding in this important area.
To insure that we reach both audiences, we will construct a public website
and develop articles for relevant professional, philanthropic and general
audience publications. This will include articles written for such outlets
as Foundation News and Chronicle of Philanthropy as well as
magazines of major environmental organizations, such as the Sierra Club
Magazine, or the Natural Resources Defense Council’s On Earth.
We will also make presentations of this work to forums such as the Environmental
Grantmakers Association, the Council on Foundations, and NNG.
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