Philanthropy

Philanthropy and funders play a catalytic role in the current environment. Despite funding bold initiatives, efforts can remain fragmented, uncoordinated across sectors or disconnected from systems change.

What’s Possible?

Funding cross-sectoral programs and investing in building cross-sector partnering skills allows philanthropy to amplify its influence and unlock systemic change.

Example Partnership Models

Partnerships for Social Innovation 

Social innovation ecosystems bring together community actors, institutions, social entrepreneurs, and policymakers to co-create solutions that address structural inequities. These ecosystems aim not just to innovate at the margins, but to rewire the relationships and power dynamics that shape public systems.

Partnerships for Research-to-Use Pathways

These partnerships create structured pathways for aligning academic research with the needs and priorities of practitioners, policymakers, and communities. Effective models emphasize co-definition of research questions, iterative engagement, and the translation of evidence into decision-ready formats.

Partnerships for Tech Transfer & Innovation Commercialization 

Tech transfer partnerships bridge academic research and real-world application by enabling technologies developed in university settings to reach markets and communities. Effective models align research incentives with commercial pathways and development needs, while building institutional capacity to manage innovation pipelines. 

Purposeful Stakeholder Engagement  

Effective partnerships begin with the right questions—and the right conversations. Purposeful engagements create structured spaces for stakeholders to surface root causes, align on priorities, and design actionable strategies. When grounded in systems thinking, these engagements go beyond consultation to build collective insight and lasting momentum. 

Example Partnership Models

7. Purposeful Stakeholder Engagement  

Effective partnerships begin with the right questions—and the right conversations. Purposeful engagements create structured spaces for stakeholders to surface root causes, align on priorities, and design actionable strategies. When grounded in systems thinking, these engagements go beyond consultation to build collective insight and lasting momentum. 

Sectors involved:

  • Academia

  • Community-Based Organizations / Non-Profit

  • Government administrators and Policymakers

  • Industry / Private Sector

  • Philanthropy

Regions: Africa, Central and East Asia, South Asia, South America, US 

2. Partnerships for Research-to-Use Pathways  

Research translation partnerships create structured pathways for aligning academic research with the needs and priorities of practitioners, policymakers, and communities. Effective models emphasize co-definition of research questions, iterative engagement, and the translation of evidence into decision-ready formats, as part of the early co-design strategies. 

Sectors involved:

  • Academia

  • Community-Based Organizations Non-Profit

  • Government administrators and Policymakers

  • Philanthropy

Regions: Africa, Central and East Asia, South Asia, South America, US, Global 

3. Partnerships for Tech Transfer & Innovation Commercialization 

Tech transfer partnerships bridge academic research and real-world application by enabling technologies developed in university settings to reach markets and communities. Effective models align research incentives with commercial pathways and development needs, while building institutional capacity to manage innovation pipelines. 

Sectors involved:

  • Community-Based Organizations Non-Profit

  • Government administrators and Policymakers

  • Industry / Private sector

  • Philanthropy

Regions: Africa, South Asia, US 

1. Partnerships for Social Innovation 

Social innovation ecosystems bring together community actors, institutions, social entrepreneurs, and policymakers to co-create solutions that address structural inequities. These ecosystems aim not just to innovate at the margins, but to rewire the relationships and power dynamics that shape public systems.

Sectors involved:

  • Community-Based Organizations Non-Profit

  • Government administrators and Policymakers

  • Industry / Private sector

  • Philanthropy

Regions: Africa, South Asia, US