DO-GOODERS.
Lewis, Paul H.
Philanthropy in America: A History
by Olivier Zunz
(Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2012)
In telling the story of American philanthropy's development
from the mid-nineteenth century to the present, Olivier Zunz, a history
professor at the University of Virginia, wants to distinguish
philanthropy from simple charitable giving. Zunz argues that
philanthropy as we know it today originated in the post--Civil War
period as a curious alliance of megarich "robber barons," such
as Carnegie, Ford, and Rockefeller, and some Progressive reformers.
Although plenty tough-minded when building their industrial empires,
once their fortunes were made the new multimillionaires often seemed
possessed by a desire to soften their public reputations and improve
society by providing endowments for universities, supporting scientific
research, or creating educational opportunities for southern blacks.
Funneling their money through charitable trusts and hiring
professional reformers to manage them, the new philanthropists soon
outdistanced by far traditional charities, whose aims had been limited
to local almsgiving. Their foundations were national--and sometimes even
international--in their scale of operations, and they aimed at uplifting
all mankind, not just the needy. Over time the reformist managers
marginalized the heirs and friends of the founding patrons on the boards
of directors, thus enabling them to pursue new goals never contemplated
in the original conception.
As a liberal, Zunz clearly approves of that trend. His liberalism
also guides him through the tricky relationship that big private
foundations had with federal and state governments. In the Gilded Age of
Republican Party dominance, elected officials often threatened to remove
the tax-exempt status of foundations perceived to be lobbying for
progressive causes. The reformers claimed they were only trying to
"educate" the public. There never was a clear distinction,
however, between "educational activities" and outright
political advocacy, especially since the reformers usually had the
vociferous support of "muckraking" journalists.
Tensions were relaxed during Woodrow Wilson's reformist
administration and especially during World War I. The foundations put
their large, well-funded organizations to work supporting the Red Cross
and mounted patriotic campaigns to get the public to buy war bonds. This
was something of a watershed in the history of American philanthropy
because, in Zunz's view, it accustomed the general public to mass
charitable giving. For example, after the war the Community Chest
movement (later known as the United Way) began to spread throughout
America's cities, aided by the prosperity of the 1920s.
Philanthropy was no longer restricted to the very wealthy; now ordinary
American families often contributed to good works.
Still, there was persistent tension between politicians and
charitable foundations over the degree to which the latter were
permitted to become policy advocates. So long as a foundation restricted
itself to raising money for fighting diseases, subsidizing medical
research, or building clinics, there was no conflict. The eugenics movement, with its promotion of birth control, was a different matter.
So were the advocates of labor legislation and pensions for war
veterans. Were such groups "educating the public"? Or were
they engaged in political agitation and propaganda? Herbert Hoover saw
private philanthropy as a low-cost alternative to government disaster
relief and sought to use the Red Cross and other private charities to
administer government aid to the homeless and unemployed when the Great
Depression followed the stock market crash in 1929. Zunz is pleased to
report that these schemes failed so badly that they made the New
Deal's welfare state inevitable.
Under Harry Hopkins, a former social worker and Franklin D.
Roosevelt's head of Federal Emergency Relief, private agencies were
no longer used to administer the funds for federal programs. The former
partnership between government and private philanthropy came to a
temporary end as the federal government claimed the exclusive right to
decide where and how emergency aid would be spent. Even so, private mass
philanthropy still had a role under the New Deal, as when Roosevelt
helped inaugurate the March of Dimes in 1938 to fight polio. Ironically,
the bigger foundations, like Ford, Rockefeller, and Carnegie, also
benefited from the New Deal's high inheritance and corporation
taxes because rich families and businesses evaded those taxes through
charitable giving.
Consequently, as Zunz shows, the foundations emerged stronger than
ever in the 1950s, well positioned to pursue their new liberal goals of
changing the habits and lifestyles of Americans to adjust to
"modern life." The social planning needed to achieve that
would be facilitated by expanding the role of the behavioral and social
sciences in university curricula, to better understand how human
behavior could be molded in homes, schools, factories, and offices. In
that way, the traditional values of an older, small-town America would
be replaced by the secular, urban values required by modern,
multicultural mass society.
Such an ambitious program naturally sparked resistance from
religious and conservative groups, but they failed in their attempt to
have the foundations' tax exemptions removed. Zunz gloats:
"Tax-exempt philanthropy, forbidden by law to carry on propaganda
or attempt to influence legislation, had turned a blind eye on those
restrictions and engaged the full spectrum of political activity.
Philanthropy was 'timid' no more." And in its press
release for the book, the Princeton University Press adds that
philanthropy "continues to shape all areas of American society,
from domestic politics, social programs, foreign politics, and the
governing and funding of Universities, to how libraries work, how
doctors are educated, how our health care system works, and how domestic
and international relief work is funded." According to Zunz, the
civil rights movement and the War on Poverty created a web of contacts
between liberal foundations like Ford, supposedly representative
"community organizations," and all levels of government. Thus,
it has become permanently impossible to separate advocacy, policy
making, and direct political action from philanthropy.
Today the largest foundations control billions of dollars in
assets, all of it tax-free, but they are not accountable to the public.
Many of the programs funded are highly controversial, to say the least.
I speak from personal experience as a former faculty member of one
university (out of twenty-two) selected by the Ford Foundation in 1990
to promote race- and sex-based hiring. Tulane's president, himself
a former economist at the foundation, accepted an initial $100,000 grant
to launch a "diversity" program that he called
"Initiatives for the Race and Gender Enrichment of Tulane
University." Under it, departments were restricted to hiring only
black faculty until further notice. Professors were required to turn in
copies of their course syllabi and reading lists so the administration
could ascertain whether, in its opinion, materials on blacks and women
were adequately represented. The faculty also had to attend
"sensitivity training" and department heads were to submit
periodic reports on racist and sexist attitudes among faculty and
students. As an additional check, every department would be assigned an
"Enrichment Liaison Person" who also would report on student
and faculty attitudes. Fortunately, a minority of Tulane professors
fought back and was able to enlist the broad support of the alumni and
the New Orleans community. Still, the fight dragged on for five years,
until the university's trustees finally overruled the president and
ended the program. I cannot say, however, how the other twenty-one
universities targeted by Ford eventually fared. In any case, the Tulane
experience is a warning to conservatives that private philanthropy can
be just as much of a threat to freedom as government social engineering.
Paul H. Lewis is a retired professor of political science from
Tulane University. He now lives in Raleigh, North Carolina.