
OBJECTIVES & GUIDELINES

Thomas Jefferson observed that "the ground
of liberty is won by inches." The Norman
Foundation seeks to help win some of those precious inches. We support
efforts that strengthen the ability of communities to determine their own
economic, environmental and social well-being, and that help people control
those forces that affect their lives. These efforts may:
- promote economic justice and development through
community organizing, coalition building and policy reform efforts;
- work to prevent the disposal of toxics in
communities, and to link environmental issues with economic and social
justice;
- link community-based economic and environmental
justice organizing to national and international reform efforts.
We will consider the following in evaluating grant proposals:
- Does the project arise from the hopes and
efforts of those whose survival, well-being and liberation are directly at
stake?
- Does it further ethnic, gender and other forms
of equity?
- Is it rooted in organized, practical
undertakings?
- Is it likely to achieve systemic change?
In pursuing systemic change,
we would hope that:
- the proposed action may serve as a model;
- the spread of the model may create institutions
that can survive on their own;
- their establishment and success may generate
beneficial adaptations by other political, social and economic
institutions and structures.
The Foundation provides
grants for general support, projects, and collaborative efforts. We also
welcome innovative proposals designed to build the capacity of social change
organizations working in our areas of interest. Priority is given to
organizations with annual budgets of under $1 million.
The Norman
Foundation is a family foundation and decisions are made by the foundation's
members. In addition to our general grants program, the foundation makes
a few grants from affiliated, smaller family funds as well as a number of
donor-advised grants each year, which reflect the individual interests of
family members.
RESTRICTIONS: The Foundation does not make grants to individuals or
universities; or to support conferences, scholarships, research, films, media
and arts projects; or to capital funding projects, fundraising drives or direct
social service programs, such as shelters or community health programs.
The Foundation's grant making is restricted to U.S.-based organizations.
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