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Rotary Foundations and Grants 1: An Introduction for Applicants and Rotarians
Rotary Foundations and Grants 1: An Introduction for Applicants and Rotarians
Rotary Foundations and Grants 1: An Introduction for Applicants and Rotarians
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Rotary Foundations and Grants 1: An Introduction for Applicants and Rotarians

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Rotary International is a nonprofit service organization with 1.2 million members worldwide in more than 35,000 clubs. The organization was founded by Paul Harris in Chicago in 1905. While clubs exist today in most countries of the world, the United States has the largest number of Rotarians and clubs, and also the largest number of local Rotary foundations managed by clubs, districts, or other entities. This is also where the Rotary Foundation of Rotary International has its headquarters, in Evanston, Illinois.
While the work of the Rotary Foundation of Rotary International is relatively well known, the work of close to 4,000 local Rotary foundations at the level of clubs and districts in the United States is less well known, even at times in their own local communities. But this work is no less important. Rotary clubs and districts are major providers of grants to nonprofits, in large part through their foundations. Clubs and districts also have a long tradition of supporting students for university studies, again through their foundations for the most part.
Together, it can be argued that local Rotary foundations in the United States have an assets base close to that of the Rotary Foundation of Rotary International. According to the latest information available from the Internal Revenue Service, the assets of the Rotary Foundation of Rotary International are just above one billion dollar. Local Rotary foundations filing forms 990 with the Internal Revenue Service have close to $775 million in assets. This does not include assets owned by 1,854 local Rotary foundations that do not file a form 990 because they have gross annual income/receipts of less than $50,000.
Charitable donations by local Rotary foundations in the United States may well exceed those of the Rotary Foundation of Rotary International globally, given that for club foundations without large endowments, most annual receipts from donations and fundraisers tend to be distributed the same year. In terms of donations by Rotary entities to nonprofits and students based in the United States, it is clear that local Rotary foundations are the main source of funding, simply because most clubs and districts focus their giving on local communities, while the Rotary Foundation of Rotary International focuses for the most part on projects implemented in developing countries. In that sense, the contributions of the Rotary Foundation of Rotary International and of local Rotary foundations in the United States nicely complement each other.
Navigating the world of Rotary foundations is not an easy task for grant applicants, whether they are nonprofits, students, or even Rotarians wishing to apply for funding for a service project implemented by their club. This book is the first in a set of two on Rotary foundations and grants. The main objective of the set is to make it easier for grant applicants to think about how and where to apply for grants. In addition, a second objective is to start to better document the charitable contributions that Rotarians provide to communities through Rotary foundations based in the United States.
In order to achieve these objectives, this first book provides a basic introduction to the world of Rotary foundations in the United States, considering first the Rotary Foundation of Rotary International, and next local Rotary foundations. The second book in the set provides a comprehensive directory or listing of Rotary foundations located in the United States by state and by city within each state. The aim is to make it easier for potential applicants to identify foundations located in their geographic area, so that they can consider whether it makes sense for them to apply for a grant or scholarship to those foundations.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherQuentin Wodon
Release dateFeb 22, 2017
ISBN9781946819031
Rotary Foundations and Grants 1: An Introduction for Applicants and Rotarians
Author

Quentin Wodon

Quentin Wodon is a Lead Economist in the Education Global Practice at the World Bank where he leads work programs among others on equity and inclusion in education, child marriage, out-of-school children, and the wealth of nations. Previously, he managed the World Bank unit on values and development, served as Lead Poverty Specialist for West and Central Africa, and as Economist/Senior Economist in the Latin America region. Before joining the World Bank, he worked among others as Assistant Brand Manager with Procter & Gamble, volunteer corps member with the International Movement ATD Fourth World, and (tenured) Assistant Professor of Economics with the University of Namur. He has also taught at American University and Georgetown University. A lifelong learner, he holds graduate degrees in Business Engineering, Economics, and Philosophy, as well as PhDs in Economics, Environmental Science, Health Sciences, and Theology and Religious Studies. Quentin has more than 500 publications on a wide range of topics. Books published since 2014 include Water and Sanitation in Uganda (World Bank), The Economics of Faith-based Service Delivery (Palgrave Macmillan), Climate Change Adaptation and Social Resilience in the Sundarbans (Routledge), Investing in Early Childhood Development (World Bank), Infrastructure and Poverty in sub-Saharan Africa (Palgrave Macmillan), Education in sub-Saharan Africa (World Bank), Faith-Based Schools in Latin America (World Bank), Climate Change and Migration (World Bank), and Membership in Service Clubs (Palgrave Macmillan). A recipient of the Prize of Belgium’s Secretary of Foreign Trade, a Fulbright grant, and the Dudley Seers Prize, Quentin has served on several advisory boards for non-profit organizations and university programs, and as Associate Editor for academic journals. A past President of the Society of Government Economists, he is currently serving as President of the Association for Social Economics. Quentin is actively involved in Rotary with his club (currently serving as President), District (former Evaluation Adviser and Interact Chair, among others), and Rotary International (committee member for the Rotary Foundation and other roles). His father was a Rotarian. His daughters founded the Interact Club of their High School. Quentin launched the Rotarian Economist blog in 2014 on World Polio Day and the Rotarian Economist Short Books series in 2017.

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