Small Planet Fund – Supporting visionary social movements, courageous grassroots organizations and innovative policy for food system transformation since 2001 (original) (raw)

Background

Supporting visionary social movements, courageous grassroots organizations, and innovative policy for food system transformation since 2001.

Header photo credit: Anna Lappé during research for Hope’s Edge

WHO WE ARE

The Fund was initially resourced by an annual fundraiser held in New York City for more than a decade. Today, the Fund is supported by an anonymous donor as well as individual donors and other foundations. We welcome your support. If you’d like to donate to the Fund, please contact us.

After more than a decade of support to these core grantees, the Fund evolved to support a range of grassroots groups throughout the year in small, strategic grants.

We believe that one of the best ways to spur the transformation of our food system and address the roots of hunger is to support those actively making change from farmers and food workers to civil society organizations sand social movements to community food activists and those working to advocate for transformative policymaking.

The Fund is a key part of our broader work, which includes engagement with others using philanthropy to transform our food system as well as our writing and public speaking, and more. Learn more about our Small Planet Institute, a research network for popular education; the Global Alliance for the Future of Food, a strategic philanthropic alliance; and the organization Anna founded, Real Food Media, a collaborative initiative to educate, inspire and grow the movement for sustainable food and farming.

Anna Lappé Executive Director, Global Alliance for the Future of Food

Frances Moore Lappé Director, Small Planet Institute

HOW WE STARTED

We started the fund on the heels of publishing our first book together, Hope’s Edge. We had traveled the world to meet some of the most visionary changemakers and social movements – from the Landless Workers Movement in Brazil to the Green Belt Movement in Kenya, and beyond – and we were moved to do something more to support these global efforts for justice and sustainability. The Fund started with the humble ambition to raise funds for the core groups we document in Hope’s Edge. It has grown over the years to continue this core grantmaking and to do grantmaking throughout the year in small, strategic grants.

We believe that the best way to spur the transformation of our food system and address the roots of hunger is to help support those actively making change—from farmers to community food activists—and those working to promote progressive policy making to even the playing field.

Since we founded the Fund in 2001, we have raised and given away more than $1 million and our grantees have gone on to have huge impact in the world, including two of our core grantees receiving the Nobel Peace Prize.

The Fund is a key part of our broader work, which includes engagement with others using philanthropy to transform our food system as well as our writing and public speaking, and more. Learn more about our Small Planet Institute, a research network for popular education, and Real Food Media, a collaborative initiative to educate, inspire and grow the movement for sustainable food and farming.

While we don’t accept unsolicited requests from grantees, we welcome funders interested in collaborations to reach out.

Anna Lappé and Frances Moore Lappé

New York, NY – October 17, 2016: The James Beard Foundation presents the National Leadership Awards at Hearst Tower.

CREDIT: Clay Williams for The James Beard Foundation.
© Clay Williams / claywilliamsphoto.com

CORE GRANTEES

Our core grantees came out of the relationships we built writing our national bestselling book, Hope’s Edge. You can learn more about these groups, described below, and many other inspiring movements worldwide, in the pages of Hope’s Edge. Our Core Grantees received annual grants from the Fund until 2018. Since 2019, we have focused on our strategic grants program, with grants that range in size from 500to500 to 500to10,000.

Learn more about our Strategic Grants here.

STRATEGIC GRANTS

For our strategic grants, we seek out opportunities that offer the biggest impact possible and are drawn to funding approaches that fill gaps left by traditional foundations. We focus on six key types of grants:

SEED GRANTS and planning grants for innovative start-ups.

EMERGENCY GRANTS to support important changemakers or their organizations at times of acute need.

LEVERAGE GRANTS for when an infusion of relatively small support can leverage more significant donations.

IMPACT GRANTS to small, grassroots organizations for which a relatively small grant has a big impact.

VISIBILITY GRANTS to awards programs or other efforts for which a small grant can garner big attention.

MULTIPLIER GRANTS to investigative journalists, writers or advocates for travel or other research expenses whose documentation, writing or other communications about their findings will have significant multiplier effects.

Anim Steel

Real Food Challenge

Katie Brimm

Food First, Food Sovereignty Tours

SELECTED GRANTEES:

PAST GRANTEES

2001 TO PRESENT

596 Acres
Added Value Community Farm
Alaska Youth for Environmental Action Training
Belo Horizonte Urban Food Tour
Belo Monte Dam project
Brickyard Educational Farms
Brooklyn Food Coalition
Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood
Coalition to Stop Fracking
Community Alliance for Global Justice
Corporate Accountability International’s Value [the] Meal
Earth Dance Farms
Ecology Center to support the soda tax campaign
Farm School NYC
Food and Environment Reporting Network
Food Sovereignty Prize
Sustainable Agriculture and Food Systems Funders Network
Food Workers Alliance
Growing Home, Inc.
Hattie Carthan Community Market
Hawaii Food Policy Council
Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy
Institute for Policy Studies
Just Food
La Via Campesina
Live Real Now’s Freedom Rides
Midwest Organic Sustainable Education
National Save the Family Farm Coalition
Nourishing the Planet
NYC Food Justice Delegation to U.S. Social Forum
Oakland Institute
Organic Advocate Training, Great Lakes Organizer
Organic Farming Research Foundation
Partners in Health’s Haiti Earthquake Relief
Pennsylvania Association for Sustainable Agriculture
Pesticide Alliance Network of North America
Rainforest Action Network
Real Food Challenge
Ryerson University’s Food Security International
Urban Harvest
Urban Tilth
US Food Sovereignty Alliance
Wangari Maathai Memorial
Western South Dakota Community Action’s Constructing Hope

CONTACT US

For grantseekers: Because of the limited capacity of our team, we do not accept unsolicited proposals.

For philanthropists: Co-founder Anna Lappé, Executive Director of the Global Alliance for the Future of Food, works in partnership with philanthropists around the world. If you would like to inquire the Global Alliance or about supporting the Small Planet Fund, please be in touch.

For donors: We welcome donations to the Fund. If you’d like to make a contribution, donations can be sent to:


Small Planet Fund
c/o RSF Social Finance

Mailing address: 300 Montgomery St. Suite 750
San Francisco CA 94104

Make checks payable to RSF Social Finance
Add “Small Planet Fund” to memo line

E: anna@futureoffood.org