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Description
Charity scandals
make sensational global headlines. A misstep in your community – or across the
continent can cast a pall on the entire sector. AFP’s Code of Ethical
Principles*, adopted in 1964, states “AFP members both individual and business
aspire to foster cultural diversity and pluralistic values and treat all people
with dignity and respect.” What does this actually mean in practice TODAY
and how is it an ethical issue? Join our diverse panel of experts as they
discuss how this principle is, and should be, applied in fundraising and
philanthropy today and what does this have to do with ethics.
This webinar is supported through the Claudia A. Looney Fund for Ethics in Fundraising.
Participants will learn:
What are the baselines or universal principles that
must be observed by every ethical fundraising professional in any organization
regardless of culture or community?
How do we identify, assess and address cultural variables
that may benefit from or require alternative approaches and solutions, but
still remain within the baseline of ethical fundraising practices?
As either an internal or external member of a diverse how do we navigate and
address circumstances or situations which may arise, while maintaining our
commitment to ethical practice and sensitivity to racial, ethnic,
socioeconomic, LGBTQ, religious, ability and other differences?
What sort of a commitment to diversity and inclusion is
expected of a fundraising professional?
Contributors
Robbe Healey
Roberta (Robbe) A.
Healey, MBA, NHA, ACFRE, Founding Member of Aurora Philanthropic Consulting,
has practiced philanthropic fundraising and non-profit organization management
for more than forty years. She is an accomplished fund raising generalist with
successful track record of establishing and strengthening development offices. More than 150 organizations have benefitted
from her fundraising, strategic planning, board development and training
services. She Chaired the Board of Directors of the Association of Fundraising
Professionals International (AFP) 2009-10 and completed twelve years of Board
service in December 2012. She is Immediate
Past Chair of the AFP International Ethics Committee. The Greater Philadelphia Chapter/AFP named her
the 2001 Fundraising Executive of the Year and AFP International awarded her the
2013 Barbara Marion Award for Outstanding Leadership. She served as a founding member of the
LeadingAge Philanthropy Network and Co-chair of the LeadingAge Philanthropy
Cabinet.
She earned a BS in Education from Northeastern University,
Boston, Massachusetts and an MBA from Villanova University, Villanova,
Pennsylvania where she is a member of the adjunct graduate Master of Public
Administration faculty. She was the 75th individual to achieve the ACFRE,
Advanced Certified Fund Raising Executive credential and holds a Pennsylvania
Nursing Home Administrators License (NHA). Healey is a sought after international speaker
and presenter, who earned the AFP Master Teacher designation in 2000, the first
year it was awarded, and has been designated a Faculty Star by the Council for
the Advancement and Support of Education (CASE). A Rotarian, she served as
2013-14 President of the Rotary Club of Greater West Chester Sunrise in West
Chester, PA. She chairs the Westminster Presbyterian Church Endowment Fund
Board and is a member of the Greater West Chester Sunrise Rotary Foundation
Board.
Amir Pasic
Amir Pasic is the Eugene R. Tempel Dean of the Indiana University Lilly Family School of Philanthropy. Prior to joining the school, Pasic was vice president of international operations at the Council for Advancement and Support of Education (CASE). Previously, Pasic was associate dean for development and strategic planning at the Johns Hopkins University Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS).
Yulanda Davis-Quarrie
Yulanda N. Davis-Quarrie, M.S., CFRE, brings more than 25 years of
leadership experience in the field of philanthropy. She currently serves as the Director of
Institutional Advancement for Ramona Convent Secondary School, in Alhambra,
California, a non-profit community-based Catholic private all girl’s college
preparatory high school. She is
responsible for the philanthropic and alumnae efforts at the school. A Certified Fund Raising Executive (CFRE) since 1990, Ms.
Davis-Quarrie has secured more than $80 million in philanthropic dollars for
various nonprofit organizations in Southern California, including Orthopaedic
Hospital in Los Angeles, The Claremont Graduate School, St. Mary Medical Center
in Long Beach, The Wellness Community in Santa Monica, Citrus Valley Health
Partners in West Covina, USC Verdugo Hills Hospital Foundation, Beverly
Hospital and St. Lucy’s Priory High School. She is actively involved with the Association of Fund
Raising Professionals(AFP), where she a member of the Greater Los Angeles
Chapter and serves on AFP international association’s ethics and investment
committees.