2016-03-30T22:27:45Z
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2016-07-27T21:42:29Z
680049658
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CS Fund & Warsh-Mott Legacy
2023-10-05T03:06:02Z
False
False
NOTE: As a small private foundation, we seek to cultivate meaningful and long-term partnerships that align with our mission. Due to our limited capacity and budget, we are able to support only a relatively small number of initiatives and are not accepting unsolicited proposals at this time.
However, if your project or initiative is in alignment with our strategy and approach, and is something we ought to know about, we invite you to share your contact info and a brief overview of your work here. While we cannot guarantee a response to every inquiry, we review submissions periodically and if there is a fit and capacity, a Program Director will contact you.
About
The CS Fund was created in 1981 by Maryanne Mott and Herman Warsh, who together endowed the Warsh-Mott Legacy in 1985. CS Fund and Warsh-Mott Legacy (CSF and WML) are private family foundations that share common program areas, staff, and boards of directors. Proposals to the two foundations are considered collectively, and grants are made by both entities. The boards of directors of CSF and WML also make recommendations to the donor-advised TOP Fund at the Marin Community Foundation.
CSF and WML’s grantmaking is forward thinking and evolves over time, yet is guided by a commitment to consistent, long-term support. Some organizations have received funding from the foundations for three decades. CSF and WML recognize the importance of general support and multi-year grants in building institutional strength and longevity and provide such support when appropriate. Project-restricted grants are also made in order to advance specific foundation objectives.
Program Areas
CSF and WML currently have three grantmaking focuses:
Stopping techno-fixes and securing precautionary assessment, regulation and oversight.
While technologies now being developed and commercialized may result in useful applications, they can also have serious negative social, environmental, economic and political impacts.
Emerging technologies must therefore be subject to precautionary assessment, regulation and oversight – especially those that are fast tracked and marketed as “techno-fixes” or “green” panaceas to climate change and other crises, as they are often false solutions that perpetuate harmful systems.
CS Fund focuses on three emerging and converging technologies.
Building capacity and power in Indigenous communities, communities of color, and social movements.
Food Sovereignty is the right of peoples to healthy and culturally appropriate food produced through ecologically sound and sustainable methods, and to define their own food and agriculture systems.
Food sovereignty is deeply connected to global struggles for a more socially just and sustainable world and necessary for a just transition to a regenerative economy and food system. It is a real solution to the most critical issues facing humanity, including global food and water insecurity, climate change, and environmental degradation.
CS Fund’s grantmaking is grounded in traditional agricultural knowledge and agroecological practices, and focuses on three cornerstones of agrobiodiversity and food system resilience.
Building translocal, transnational, interdependent community-level social and ecological justice.
CS Fund is inspired by movement leaders in environmental justice, worker justice, climate justice, Indigenous Sovereignty, Black Liberation and more in their collective framing of Just Transition: “Transition is inevitable. Justice is not.” We launched our program at the end of 2023, with a core focus on community power building and community self-determination that transforms our current extractive, supremacist culture to one of justice, joy, belonging and liberation for all living beings. We acknowledge the many visions toward liberation that are grounded in cultures around the world, from Buen Vivir to Ubuntu to Ahimsa, and recognize that a pluralistic view of transformation is needed to build across our cultures.
Protecting and advancing rights, democracy and equity.
The US Constitution never envisioned a multiracial democracy. In order to enact the promise of our Constitution for all people - and for the sake of our planet - we must follow the lead of movements and communities fighting for justice and equity, and help create conditions in which they can thrive.
We are especially focused on the areas of:
In the realm of international governance, CSF and WML have also long funded in the area of:
cs-fund-and-warsh-mott-legacy-loi
2025-01-21T06:37:25Z