Uniform Champions
A Wise Giver's Guide to Excellent Assistance for Veterans
Available Formats:
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Complimentary printed book for qualified donors.
E-mail us at main@PhilanthropyRoundtable.org or call 202.822.8333
Donors eager to offer charitable assistance to veterans asked The Philanthropy Roundtable in 2012 to establish one of the country's very earliest advisory programs on this subject. The first product was a practical guidebook, called Serving Those Who Served, which profiled nonprofits (many of them brand new) showing promise in this field.
Five years later, here is a valuable successor volume. It looks at assistance for veterans from the other side of the table—chronicling the most successful funders in this area, and what they've learned, though real-life experience, about the best ways to boost men and women entering civilian life after military service.
In these pages, you'll hear the stories of a dozen and a half of the country's savviest donors in this area—a mix of individuals, foundations, and corporate benefactors. Some of these givers focus their charitable work entirely on vets. Others added this worthy population to other philanthropic priorities. All are paragons of smart, efficient, effective giving.
This guidebook is built on years of advisory work, scores of first-hand interviews, and careful research and analysis. It includes a statistical appendix offering a range of indicators on the status of veterans (some of them pointing in surprisingly different directions from conventional news portrayals), an up-to-the-minute review of services provided by government, and many details for donors anxious to be as helpful as possible to those who have worn our nation's uniform.
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Preface
By: Adam Meyerson -
Introduction
By: Christian Anschutz -
Making the Case for Philanthropy for Veterans
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Case Study 1: A Gamer Puts Vets to Work
The Call of Duty Endowment separates potent non profits from also rans -
Case Study 2: Brewing Up Jobs
Starbucks’s Howard Schultz helps veterans and employers sit down together -
Case Study 3: Emphasizing Education
Jerome Kohlberg connects veterans to campuses -
Case Study 4: Recruit, Retain, and Educate
Bill Ahmanson encourages colleges to remember vets -
Case Study 5: Bringing in the National Champions
The Albertson Foundation aids rural veterans -
Case Study 6: Assets Not Victims
The Heinz Foundation sees vets as a competitive advantage -
Case Study 7: Don’t Patronize—Empower
Bernie Marcus makes veterans self-reliant -
Case Study 8: Going Big
Steve Cohen spends heavily on mental health -
Case Study 9: Training the Trainers
The Jonas Center fills our nursing pool -
Case Study 10: Making Vets a Focus
The Weinberg Foundation extends its donor intent to a new field -
Case Study 11: A Re-boot
Centering the USAA Foundation anew on military men and women -
Case Study 12: Rethinking Disability
Donors launch an experiment that could spark seminal social reform -
Lessons and Opportunities
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Vital Statistics
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Rapid Expansion of the Department of Veterans Affairs