The two questions I repeat the most, in both my classes and in my practice, are these: What’s the goal? Who decides?
What’s the goal?
Is your agency’s goal to be the best food pantry (or any other service providing/safety net charity)? Or is it to address the underlying issues related to food scarcity (or any other complicated, multi-layered critical issue)? If it’s the former, that’s charity. If it’s the latter, that’s social justice.
Social Justice is working to change systemic issues. Charity is responding to immediate needs. As anyone who has ever taken my class or worked in our field will tell you, we need both. We’re not going to ignore the hungry child in front of us to work for social justice. Yet, we can’t only get food for those who are hungry, because the root causes are what’s causing food scarcity.
Every person who serves a nonprofit has to decide where to plug in. Every staff member. Every researcher. Every leader. Every volunteer. Every donor.
What’s the goal?
Do we keep fishing cats out of the river, or look upstream and deal with whatever or whoever is causing the cats to be in the river? What’s the goal? (It’s a handy question.)
Nonprofit Boards, in concert with their CEO, set the goal. The goal sets the path. (This could be a great generative conversation for a future Board meeting.)
If the goal is to be the best food pantry, and there’s nothing wrong with aspiring to be the best food pantry – unless your goal is social justice, and then you’re on the wrong path. The path supports the work toward the goal.
Maybe you want both? I always did. I wanted to run the best agency I could, doing good work, meeting our mission, with a well trained, dedicated and talented Board and staff, serving our clients with dignity AND I want to work with my community partners to eliminate the need for my agency.
That means dual goals with dual paths. You can be the best food pantry and also work with community partners to eliminate food scarcity. Food scarcity, and all systemic issues, is a big scary multi layered bucket of issues that include privilege, implicit bias, legal and policy challenges, poverty elimination, racism, sexism, classism, housing, school funding imbalances, and lots of other things that are hard to tease out and even harder to solve.
Being the best is a go it alone, we have the answers, and we’ll get it done model. It’s a bit more territorial and a lot less collaborative, but it’s not ineffective and sometimes the circumstances call for it.
Am I competing against my partner agencies for funding? Sometimes I am. Does that mean I can’t also work with them to address the underlying issues in our community. Some will tell you it does. I’m here to tell you it doesn’t. Where you sit always determines where you stand.
It’s why your values have to match your agency’s policies and its aspirations? As I mentioned in Reflecting on my Pursuit of Social Justice “saying you value one thing but actually doing another sends a very inconsistent and confusing message. If we want our teams to live our values, then we have to live them and our policies and systems have to reflect them.”
Who Decides?
You do, collectively and individually. You decide at the agency level. You decide at the community level. You decide at your leadership level- on your team, in your neighborhood. Every day. With every decision. Every donation. Every allocation. Every choice.
There was a great piece on NPR this morning In Some Rural Counties, Hunger Is Rising, But Food Donations Aren’t looking at just this issue. It’s not just SW Virginia. There are communities across the country that are discussing systemic issues and setting goals for change in their community. I’m proud to tell you that several of those cities are in Ohio; Cleveland, Cincinnati and Columbus have been and continue to have these conversations.
I’m hoping it’s a national trend. Even if it’s not yet a trend that has come to your community, you can still move toward social justice.
We each get to decide if we run our agencies to be the best organization alone or if we work together to eliminate the need for all of our agencies, because we addressed the systemic issue requiring our agencies. How?
By deciding to be less territorial and more collaborative. Call your partners and other leaders in your community who work on like issues and invite them to discuss the options. Are you ready to set a Theory of Change for your community? If so, the Annie E. Casey Foundation has a great manual on how.
Before you do, you might have to stop being afraid of scarcity and start embracing abundance. If you’re currently looking at the world and your ability to impact change as a zero sum game – and it’s how many of us have been trained to think – I invite you to read Agreements, Vibrancy and Abundance.
We can change our corner of the world alone at our desks or we can do it together. If our goal is social justice, together will get us farther, faster.
What’s your experience standing in the breech between social justice and charity. Where did you elect to stand? As always, I welcome your insight, feedback and experience. Please offer your ideas or suggestions for blog topics and consider hitting the follow button to enter your email. A rising tide raises all boats.
[…] Does Your Agency Aspire to Social Justice or Charity? […]
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