This paper describes a telephone survey (called America Gives) which asked 1,304 randomly-selected adults about their philanthropic behavior (giving of time and treasure) after the events of September 11, 2001. The questions were part of a larger national study (n = 4,200) on giving and volunteering that was being conducted at the time of the September 11 attacks. This paper provides a brief description of the study that was being conducted at the time of the terrorist attacks, the methodological considerations resulting from the immediate philanthropic response to the September 11 events, and steps that were taken to adapt the study to the changing national conditions. Next we provide descriptive results from the survey, along with mult...
This report presents a detailed analysis of shifts in American household giving from the year 2000 t...
A letter report issued by the General Accounting Office with an abstract that begins "Some surveys s...
A 1998-1999 survey of the giving and volunteering practices of 3,616 adult Californians yielded some...
The Center on Philanthropy at Indiana University surveyed 1,304 adults about their household’s phila...
This article describes a telephone survey (called “America Gives”) that asked 1,304 randomly selecte...
Assesses the philanthropic sector's response to September 11 through interviews with leaders in the ...
Assesses the philanthropic sector's response to September 11 through in-depth interviews with leader...
Examines the philanthropic response to September 11, 2001, and focuses on key aspects of the relief ...
The unprecedented outpouring of charitable support that followed the September 11, 2001, terrorist a...
The Foundation Center conducted a survey of 9/11 donors and of a broad sample of grantmakers from Ma...
This fourth and final version of Giving in the Aftermath of 9/11 provides a definitive and comprehen...
This report issued by Washington Grantmakers documents the philanthropic response to the September 1...
The unprecedented outpouring of charitable support that followed the September 11, 2001, terrorist a...
While conventional wisdom in fundraising maintains that donors of all types give in response to need...
Recent research in psychology suggest that altruism and altruistic decisions may, in fact, be endoge...
This report presents a detailed analysis of shifts in American household giving from the year 2000 t...
A letter report issued by the General Accounting Office with an abstract that begins "Some surveys s...
A 1998-1999 survey of the giving and volunteering practices of 3,616 adult Californians yielded some...
The Center on Philanthropy at Indiana University surveyed 1,304 adults about their household’s phila...
This article describes a telephone survey (called “America Gives”) that asked 1,304 randomly selecte...
Assesses the philanthropic sector's response to September 11 through interviews with leaders in the ...
Assesses the philanthropic sector's response to September 11 through in-depth interviews with leader...
Examines the philanthropic response to September 11, 2001, and focuses on key aspects of the relief ...
The unprecedented outpouring of charitable support that followed the September 11, 2001, terrorist a...
The Foundation Center conducted a survey of 9/11 donors and of a broad sample of grantmakers from Ma...
This fourth and final version of Giving in the Aftermath of 9/11 provides a definitive and comprehen...
This report issued by Washington Grantmakers documents the philanthropic response to the September 1...
The unprecedented outpouring of charitable support that followed the September 11, 2001, terrorist a...
While conventional wisdom in fundraising maintains that donors of all types give in response to need...
Recent research in psychology suggest that altruism and altruistic decisions may, in fact, be endoge...
This report presents a detailed analysis of shifts in American household giving from the year 2000 t...
A letter report issued by the General Accounting Office with an abstract that begins "Some surveys s...
A 1998-1999 survey of the giving and volunteering practices of 3,616 adult Californians yielded some...