Archive for the ‘Chrity’ Tag
Definition of the Volunteer
Filed under: Chrity, Philanthropy, Philianthropic work, Social Entrepreneurship, Social welfare, Venture Philanthropy, Volunteering, Youth Philanthropy | Tags: Chrity, Philanthropy, Philianthropic work, Social Entrepreneurship, Social welfare, Venture Philanthropy, Volunteering, Youth Philanthropy
Leave a Comment A volunteer is someone who works for a community or for the benefit of environment primarily because they choose to do so. The word comes from Latin, and can be translated as “will” (as in doing something out of ones own free will). Many serve through a non-profit organization – sometimes referred to as formal volunteering, but a significant number also serve less formally, either individually or as part of a group.
A volunteer work is not and should never be a required work. A volunteer may or may not get paid or receive compensation for services rendered. General Andrew Jackson’s Tennessee Volunteers were paid by the General personally, although he did seek reimbursement at Washington for his expenditures.
Volunteering comes in many forms: serving food at the local homeless shelter, providing computer technical support to a non-profit organization, acting in a leadership capacity on a charitable organization’s board of directors or coordinating the emergency response in the case of a disaster. Around the world volunteer centers exist to support the voluntary sector and make a difference in the communities that they serve.
Social enterprise
Filed under: Chrity, Philanthropy, Philianthropic work, Social Entrepreneurship, Social welfare, Venture Philanthropy, Volunteering, Youth Philanthropy | Tags: Charitable Activity, Charity, Chrity, Philanthropy, Philianthropic work, Social enterprise, Social Entrepreneurship, Social welfare, Venture Philanthropy, Volunteering, Youth Philanthropy
Leave a Comment Social enterprises are social mission driven organizations which trade in goods or services for a social purpose. Their aim to accomplish targets that are social and environmental as well as financial is often referred to as having a triple bottom line. Social enterprises are profit-making businesses set up to tackle a social or environmental need. Many commercial businesses would consider themselves to have social objectives, but social enterprises are distinctive because their social or environmental purpose is central to what they do.
Rather than maximizing shareholder value, their main aim is to generate profit to further their social and environmental goals. Therefore some commentators describe them as ‘not-for-profit’ as their profits are not (at least primarily) distributed to financial investors. Others dislike the term as it suggests they have unbusiness like attitude. An ingenious solution to this quandary is to call them for ‘more-than-profit’ (a term used at the Social Enterprise Institute Conference, Herriot-Watt University, in 2003).
It could be that the profit (or surplus) from the business is used to support social aims (whether or not related to the activity of the business, as in a charity shop), or that the business itself accomplishes the social aim through its operation, for instance by employing disadvantaged people (social firms) or lending to businesses that have difficulty in securing investment from mainstream lenders.