The Urgent Action Funds, which supports organizations led by women and trans human rights activists, has shared its commitment to eight core feminist principles to promote a new form of philanthropic activism.

We find ourselves in a period of profound transformation. The COVID-19 pandemic and the climate crisis have exacerbated existing systemic economic, racial, and global disparities. Simultaneously, human rights and democracies are facing unprecedented challenges, while social movements are shedding light on these issues.
Within the realm of philanthropy, those providing funds are now grappling with questions of power, fairness, and responsibility in new ways. There is a growing recognition of the unfair systems that have created and sustained the field of philanthropy, and a growing belief that the sector should be transformed in order to effectively address the challenges of this time.
Feminist principles
The Urgent Action Funds, which supports organizations led by women and trans human rights activists, has shared its commitment to eight core feminist principles to promote a new form of philanthropic activism.
Practice trust and reshape accountability. We respect the autonomy of our partners, refraining from imposing our own agendas. We challenge the disproportionate demand for monitoring and results, making our grants available with limited reporting. We ground our decision-making in our accountability to movements and the wider ecosystem. We ask ourselves: is this action appropriate for us to take or is it better led by others?
Interrogate and challenge power. We reject the dominant culture of giving that reinforces the donor’s power over the recipient. Instead, we seek to build mutual solidarity, cultures of sharing, and power with each other. Our Sisterhood itself is a site to disrupt and heal unequal power relations: among us, we navigate lines of difference based on race, age, geographic proximity to funders, ease in English, vaccine inequity and more. We hold conversations about power with care and vulnerability.
Navigate risk with care. As feminist funders, risk is inherent to our work. We support defenders who face regular threats to their lives as they challenge state and corporate actors, including in countries where their activism is criminalized. We are careful not to add to the dangers that activists face. We also understand ‘unhealthy’ activist and funding practices as a source of risk. They cause burnout and threaten the sustainability of movements.
Ground in collective care and protection. As they contend with violence, grief, and exhaustion, we support defenders to stay safe and sustain their activism. We go beyond an activist’s access to leisure time to interrogate the roots of collective spiritual, mental, and emotional distress. We change our organizational policies and cultures to incorporate care. We focus on the ways our networks can nurture us. And we question even the most sacred tenets of our movements, challenging them when they lead to disillusionment and burnout.
Challenge dominant narratives on efficiency and time. Our founding impulse – to get urgently needed funds into the hands of women and LBTQI+ defenders quickly and with ease – underscores our commitment to deconstructing traditional notions of efficiency and time. We can turn around a grant in a matter of hours. We have also learned the importance of pausing – of moving slowly, listening carefully, and seeing each other as our whole selves. This is how we build the relationships we will need when it is time to move quickly again.
Build resources with politics and ethics. As we work to transform the politics of resourcing, we leverage our collective strength to address geopolitical inequities in the funding landscape. We strategically assess the ethics of potential funding sources, recognizing that while sometimes we can affect greater change by entering into a relationship with a funder, other times we will have to decline funding in solidarity with defenders. We work to activate philanthropy in our regions, diversifying who gives and shifting who sets the agenda.
Value both interdependence and independence. Our model of international philanthropy upends the paradigm of organizations headquartered in the Global North with branches in the Global South. Each Sister Fund is autonomous, rooting power and decision-making in the regions. We also collaborate closely, building a shared global analysis, speaking with one megaphone on advocacy issues, and learning and innovating together. As many organizations look to build new structures that share power, we are glad to share our experiences.
Learn and evolve. We recognize that learning is about power: the power to define what changes are sought, what data is seen as valid, who shapes the story the data tells us, and what lessons will be acted upon. As we bring a feminist lens to learning, we lift up the regular pauses we take to reflect, integrate, and evolve as a political practice on our part. Some of our most powerful work, from collective care to disability justice, emerged from these reflections.
Source: Alliance Magazine