Opinion

A reminder about power dynamics, because we keep forgetting

Written by Vu Le

Hi everyone, real quick before we focus on this week’s topic, for the past few months, Crappy Funding Practices has been calling out the eye-popping shenanigans we’ve encountered. Such as the funder that requires grantees to submit a notarized report every 60 days! (Hats off to you, Garneau-Nicon Family Foundation; that’s a breathtakingly new level of insipidness). Here’s a great article on the movement by our colleague Dawn Wolfe. The LinkedIn following is now at over 12,000 and growing rapidly; join in on the fun.

However, all of this takes work! Behind these posts on LinkedIn are teams of volunteers spending hours communicating with folks who nominate funders, vetting submissions, crafting the call-outs, engaging with social media, developing list of resources, planning meetings and organizing, etc. It’s a lot of work and right now all volunteer-run. We need more people involved. So, if you’re interested in helping out, please join a special meeting we’re hosting on May 14th at 10am Pacific Time, where we’ll update you on what’s been going on, and present the different options for you to plug into. Register here. See you then!

This week, I want us to revisit power dynamics, because it seems like many of us continue to forget it exists, as well as forget the lessons we may have learned in the past regarding it. I think overall, most people understand power dynamics. We understand, for instance, that a donor who gives a lot of money wields a lot of power, which they could use to lord over a nonprofit and shape its work. Or that an Executive Director or CEO has hierarchical power that makes it hard for staff to provide feedback or pushback against their ideas.

But power dynamics are everywhere, and we don’t always acknowledge and account for it, which is why we still have so many ridiculous practices in our sector. And also why so many of us are exhausted arguing with people about stuff that should be obvious by now.

A couple of examples come to mind. First, going back to CFP, a colleague took issue with the movement, posting, “I’m trying to understand how Crappy Funding Practice is effective for publicly shaming foundations, rather than having adult conversations with them about the issues.” A few people agreed. The rest of us sigh and point out that because of power imbalance between funders and grantseekers, these “adult conversations” often cannot take place, or are not effective even if they do happen. People cannot be honest when there is the possibility of their being punished for telling funders their grant processes are destructive, archaic, and nonsensical.

Second example, our field’s continuation with the practice of nonprofits asking their staff to donate back to the org, insisting on a wacky and nonsensical “100% employee-giving” rate. I find this type of fundraising gross and unethical. And yet, many colleagues in our field still passionately defend it, an argument being “it’s optional, staff can always say no; no one is forcing them to donate.” This and other arguments neglect the inherent power dynamics that exist in this situation that makes this icky practice coercive and not optional at all, even if stated otherwise.

So, let’s remind ourselves to be more aware of power dynamics.

Read full article here.

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About the author

Vu Le

Vu Le (“voo lay”) is a writer, speaker, vegan, Pisces, and the former Executive Director of RVC, a nonprofit in Seattle that promotes social justice by developing leaders of color, strengthening organizations led by communities of color, and fostering collaboration between diverse communities.

Vu’s passion to make the world better, combined with a low score on the Law School Admission Test, drove him into the field of nonprofit work, where he learned that we should take the work seriously, but not ourselves. There’s tons of humor in the nonprofit world, and someone needs to document it. He is going to do that, with the hope that one day, a TV producer will see how cool and interesting our field is and make a show about nonprofit work, featuring attractive actors attending strategic planning meetings and filing 990 tax forms.

Known for his no-BS approach, irreverent sense of humor, and love of unicorns, Vu has been featured in dozens, if not hundreds, of his own blog posts at NonprofitAF.com.