Aligning Legacy with Liberation: What if your family’s legacy was rooted in supporting liberation for all peoples?
William Cordery William Cordery

Aligning Legacy with Liberation: What if your family’s legacy was rooted in supporting liberation for all peoples?

“Your family’s legacy can in fact honor previous generations, their sacrifices and opportunities; as well as hold a necessary critique of the harm these opportunities may have caused for many others,” says author Will Cordery. Will and his team at Freedom Futures share their Aligning Legacy with Liberation™ framework and the belief that a family’s liberation is deeply attached to the liberation of marginalized communities.

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BLACK PHILANTHROPY MONTH: INTERVIEW WITH WILL CORDERY
William Cordery William Cordery

BLACK PHILANTHROPY MONTH: INTERVIEW WITH WILL CORDERY

So much of my philanthropic advising work is to center the importance of Black liberation—all liberation is tied to Black liberation. In the Black communities where I’ve lived, I’ve found chosen family, given and received love, and remained accountable to racial justice and Black liberation.

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Dear Philanthropy: These Are the Fires of Anti-Black Racism
William Cordery William Cordery

Dear Philanthropy: These Are the Fires of Anti-Black Racism

My call to philanthropy: fund racial justice. Fund the hell out of it. Fund racial justice work that centers organizing and power-building to counter anti-Blackness. Fund racial justice work that centers the lived experiences, leadership, and communities of Black people. Fund spaces that foster a radical imagination and the creation of new ways of being that could potentially replace centuries of systemic and structural racist practices in our society.

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Sit in It: Philanthropy Must Embrace Discomfort and Rapid Change on the Road to Achieving Equity
William Cordery William Cordery

Sit in It: Philanthropy Must Embrace Discomfort and Rapid Change on the Road to Achieving Equity

When Alton Sterling and Philando Castile were murdered last summer, they joined a long list of Black people slain through state-sanctioned violence, a pile of dead Black and Brown bodies for whom no one was accountable. We also watched in horror as police used pepper spray, rubber bullets and concussion cannons, and dogs to fight peaceful protestors at the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe who were protecting their land, cultural sites and water from the Dakota Access Pipeline. These processes are becoming so familiar to the modern American psyche that their almost now as rote as arithmetic. Black and Brown and Native communities demanded justice. The headlines sensationalized and stirred passions. Leaders gave empathetic, but careful speeches.

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Resourcing the Movement for Black Lives
William Cordery William Cordery

Resourcing the Movement for Black Lives

Imagine if institutional philanthropy strengthened its mutual trust with social movements by matching our grantmaking strategies with movement building principles. Foundations could resource community organizing with long-term, general operating support so groups can have the flexibility to concentrate their efforts for structural change.

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