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Civic crowdfunding

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Civic crowdfunding refers to the cooperative effort of individuals in fundraising and philanthropy for community projects. In modern times, such efforts typically communicating with one another on the Internet. Civic crowdfunding can also include the use of crowd funding to develop public assets, and/or the investment of public funds.

Examples of civic crowdfunding

The Statue of Liberty project was a civic crowdfunding campaign by newspaper owner Joseph Pulitzer. In 1884, with the finished monument due to be shipped from France, the American Committee had raised only half of the $300,000 it needed to pay for the pedestal on which the statue would stand. (The French funded the statue itself.) Fundraising for the project was controversial: Grover Cleveland, then governor of New York, vetoed a plan for the city to invest in the statue, while Congressional Democrats voted against federal funding. With the statue’s completion seemingly in jeopardy, Pulitzer launched a call for public donations through his newspaper The World. The campaign raised $100,000 in five months from 120,000 donations.[1]

In February 2013, Chicago launched a crowdfunding campaign to raise $480,000 for a city-backed basketball program for at-risk youth, the Windy City Hoops, using the Indiegogo platform. The campaign was backed by Mayor Rahm Emanuel and is sponsored by Chicago Parks Foundation, the philanthropic partner of the Chicago Park District.[2]

The New York City Council has a Kickstarter page featuring civic-related projects in the city.[3]

In the United Kingdom, a campaign by the community of Glyn Coch, South Wales, used the platform Spacehive to raise the final $55,000 needed to complete a $1.2 million community center project.[4] Backers of the project included the comedian Stephen Fry and the supermarket chain Tesco.

David Lepeska wrote about the broader field of digital platforms to improve public space in an article called "When We're All Urban Planners" in Next American City.[5] The article listed not just funding platforms, but also citizen tools like "See, Click, Fix" to report problems like potholes to government agencies. ioby is another type of civic crowdfunding platform that also allows people to volunteer with projects in addition to donating to them.[6]

See also

Examples

References

Notes

  1. ^ Park Service, National (20 Feb 2012). "Joseph Pulitzer". Retrieved 22 February 2013.
  2. ^ "Windy City Hoops: Rahm Emanuel Wants Chicagoans To Crowdfund Youth Basketball Program". Huffington Post. 20 Feb 2012. Retrieved 22 February 2013.
  3. ^ NYC Council Kickstarter page
  4. ^ "In Britain, Spacehive helps the people get civic projects done". Los Angeles Times. 2 Feb 2012. Retrieved 22 February 2013.
  5. ^ Lepeska, David (17 Sept 2012). "When We're All Urban Planners". Next American City. Retrieved 12 February 2013. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  6. ^ Coren, Michael (27 Feb 2012). "In Our Backyard: Funding Projects To Make Neighborhoods Better". Fast Company Co.Exist. Retrieved 12 February 2013.