Spring 2023 NonProfit Management PS5210 section 001

DISASTER PHILANTHROPY

Call Number 12653
Day & Time
Location
W 6:10pm-8:00pm
608 Lewisohn Hall
Points 3
Grading Mode Standard
Approvals Required None
Instructor Gregory Witkowski
Type LECTURE
Method of Instruction In-Person
Course Description

This course analyzes the ways in which philanthropists and nonprofit organizations plan for and respond to disasters. Disasters create immense need quickly. People have responded generously to many natural and human-created disasters that have led to thousands of victims either domestically or globally. The nonprofit sector has often played a leading role, functioning both on the front-lines with first responders and creating a second response that bridges the period of relief and rebuilding. New technologies have often been deployed to improve fundraising as well as disaster relief. Disasters create both a sense of community born of the common experience of suffering and exacerbate differences within communities as those of lowest means struggle the most to recover. Disaster relief and recovery is ripe with questions about who to help and how to best help, presenting ethical dilemmas for the best intentioned of nonprofit leaders. The course will focus on the United States but both readings and assignments include some international comparisons.

Web Site Vergil
Department Non Profit Management
Enrollment 3 students (15 max) as of 2:07PM Monday, April 29, 2024
Subject NonProfit Management
Number PS5210
Section 001
Division School of Professional Studies
Campus Morningside
Note NOPM STUDENTS ONLY; OTHERS WITH PROGRAM APPROVAL
Section key 20231NOPM5210K001