Showing posts with label #Knowledge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #Knowledge. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 23, 2025

🌉 IMSPARK: Philanthropy That Builds Bridges 🌉

 🌉 Imagine… Philanthropy That Builds Bridges 🌉 

💡 Imagined Endstate:

A future where investment in democracy, education, and equity isn’t charity—it’s strategy. A Pacific where global philanthropy uplifts local leadership and seeds the future with trust, inclusion, and knowledge.

📚 Source: 

Carnegie Corporation of New York. (2025). Summer 2025: Supporting Democracy, Knowledge, and a More Inclusive Future. Link.

💥 What’s the Big Deal:

The Summer 2025 Carnegie report is not just a reflection of philanthropy’s priorities—it’s a call for systems-level solidarity🌍. With threats to democratic values, racial equity, and global cooperation on the rise, the report highlights how targeted investments in civic education, local journalism, and immigrant inclusion serve as cornerstones for sustainable, informed societies.

For PI-SIDS and historically underrepresented communities, this kind of intentional giving matters. When funders focus on capacity—not just charity—they empower communities to shape their futures🌱. Programs featured in the report demonstrate how inclusive research, multilingual civic tools, and educational opportunity can shift narratives and policy alike. 

The lesson: real change is local, intersectional, and collaborative🤝. Whether supporting voting rights in island territories or expanding access to Indigenous knowledge systems, the best philanthropy listens before it acts—and amplifies voices before it intervenes.




#DemocracyInAction, #InclusivePhilanthropy, #EquityInvestments, #GlobalLeadership,#CivicPower,#Knowledge,#CarnegieFoundation,#IMSPARK,


Thursday, February 8, 2024

📔IMSPARK: academic access and shared knowledge freely📔

📔Imagine...academic access and shared knowledge freely📔

💡 Imagined Endstate: 

A Pacific where researchers, educators, students, policymakers, and the public can access, use, and contribute to the latest research findings and innovations in the social sciences and humanities without barriers or costs.

🔗Link:

Ref Here

📚Source: 

Ernst, E., Schulte, J., & Töpfer, M. (2020). How to fill the information gap: Open Access for the social sciences and humanities. Septentrio Conference Series, (4).

💥 What's the Big Deal: 

This presentation by Schulte et al. (2020) provides practical guidance and resources for researchers to publish their work in open access. Access is not only about increasing the visibility of research, but it is also about promoting equity and addressing the knowledge gap. Open access makes scholarly publications available online for anyone to read, reuse, and share without any restrictions or fees. 🌐It benefits researchers by increasing their work's visibility, impact, and quality. It benefits society by advancing knowledge, fostering innovation, and promoting social justice.🚀 However, many social sciences and humanities researchers face challenges and lack of information about open access. 

In a Pacific context, Open Access can be seen as another venue for equity, where the commodity is knowledge. 📖Knowledge creates opportunities for innovation, social justice, and economic growth. By making research freely available to everyone, regardless of their location or socio-economic status, Open Access can help address the imbalance in the production and distribution of knowledge, particularly in the social sciences and humanities. 🙌The result of this access could lead to a more informed future, where everyone has equal access to the latest research findings and innovations and advocates for open access in their disciplines and institutions.


#OpenAccess, #GrayLiterature, #Pacific, #Knowledge, #IMSPARK,#equity,#academics, 

   


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