Archive for July, 2010

The Viewpoint of an Intern: Christine

Sunday, July 18th, 2010

Philanthropiece is honored to have the presence of two amazing interns this summer. Christine Evans joined our team earlier this month and we couldn’t be happier to have her. Christine will begin her senior year this fall at the College of Wooster, but before that, she will spend the summer helping Philanthropiece learn more about sustainable agriculture and family gardens. Just like her counterpart Carrie, we have asked Christine to share her observations and highlights of her research here on the Philanthropiece blog. Check back regularly for words from the extraordinary Philanthropiece interns.

And now, we present the first installment of “The Viewpoint of an Intern” by Christine, our Fabulous Intern.

Although this is technically my second week at Philanthropiece, I am going to pretend for this blog that it is week one. Last week I was only in two days because Monday was a holiday, Wednesdays we have staff meetings and Thursday Katie, Carrie and I had a wonderful lunch with Katie’s cousin Emily who works at the Wild Foundation. We learned all about the amazing things they are doing and it was very eye opening to see how another non-profit operates. This week I have primarily been researching international development organizations that have implemented successful family or community gardens in Latin America. The two organizations I have so far, Project Harvest and The Garden’s Edge, are actually both in Guatemala and the fact that they have been very successful for a number of years demonstrates that they could both be a good model to work off of with family gardens in Chajul. The garden initiative in Chajul is currently at the point where, if little is done, all the momentum behind it could easily burn out. It’s exciting though, because with more attention I think it could easily become an integral part of the community and one that would help combat hunger and malnutrition, be an extra source of income, and help the community to be more self-sufficient and sustainable.

An Intern’s Perspective: Week Eight

Saturday, July 17th, 2010

From Carrie, the Intern

Katie, Christine and I recently had lunch with Emily Loose at the WILD Foundation, the only international organization dedicated entirely and explicitly to wilderness protection around the world. Lunch was delicious, and it was great to hear about their latest initiative, “Nature Needs Half”, an initiative to have at least fifty percent of the world be dedicated to protected land. Especially interesting was the approach needed to do environmental work in Boulder County, an area saturated in go green initiatives. Boulder already has over fifty percent of the land designated as wild space, but some of the land counted by the county is agricultural land. While an organic farm certainly qualifies for open space, a large agricultural project could harm the very land we’re trying to protect. WILD has partnered with photographers to get the message out (they’ve used this technique with other projects as well) and the images are simply stunning!  If you’re interested, search their media page under photos for some great inspiration http://www.wild.org/community/photos/

And here’s one of my favorite WILD photos:

An Intern’s Perspective: Week Seven

Thursday, July 8th, 2010

from Carrie, the Intern

When I inquired about a possible internship at Philanthropiece, I was motivated by one particularly intriguing aspect of the organization; it’s a foundation that is a non grant making entity.  I was fascinated with the idea of an operational foundation, something I’d never heard of before.  It has taken a while for me to fully grasp what being an “operational foundation” entails, and I’d like to briefly outline the model here in the blog.  The key is to collaborate; preventing competition for scarce resources.  Philanthropiece’s model of partnership allows us to work in tandem with organizations already on the ground in the communities on the same program(s) before we consider running our own programming; allowing us to increase the resources allocated to the initial program, learn about the community’s unique situation, and prevent program overlap if we start our own programming.  Our partners are already established in and familiar with the communities in which we work, and we truly value the ability to learn from and contribute to their work.  What makes Philanthropiece different from a traditional foundation? We recognize that problems go deeper than funding, and that solutions must do the same.