Atkinson Foundation | Atkinson Charitable Foundation

SOURCE:  Wikipedia, captured 2020-07-30

  • Formation: 1942
  • Founder: Joseph E. Atkinson
  • Legal status: Charity
  • Headquarters: Toronto Ontario, Canada
  • Executive Director: Colette Murphy
  • Website: AtkinsonFoundation.ca
  • Joseph E. Atkinson (born 1865-12-23; died 1948-05-08) was a Canadian newspaper editor and activist. Under his leadership the Toronto Star became one of the largest and most influential newspapers in Canada. Atkinson amassed a considerable fortune, eventually holding the controlling interest in the paper he edited. After his death, control of the paper passed to the trustees of the Atkinson Foundation, a major Canadian charity.

  • In partnership with the Atkinson Foundation, the Broadbent Institute formed the Power Lab  [see also Broadbent Institute description], an arms-length and non-partisan learning initiative centred on the people building community power, on the ground. Alejandra Bravo, the Broadbent Institute's Director of Leadership and Training, is a Director and Co-Facilitator at the Power Lab.  [Source, "Training and Leadership" subsection.]


    The Atkinson Charitable Foundation is a major Canadian charity established in 1942 by Joseph E. Atkinson (1865-1948). It is a non-governmental, and non-profit organization.

    History

    Joseph E. Atkinson (1865-1948) was the founding chair of the Atkinson Foundation which was established in 1942. After Atkinson senior died in 1948, control of the Toronto Star passed to the trustees of the Foundation. Atkinson, a philanthropist, was the owner and publisher of the Toronto Star until his death in 1948 at the age of 82. Atkinson was President and chair of the board of directors of the Foundation.

    Mandate

    The Atkinson Foundation promotes social and economic justice in Ontario. Since 2014, the Foundation has focused on strengthening movements for decent work and a fair economy.

    Key people

    Colette Murphy is the Atkinson Foundation's executive director. Past Executive Directors include Olivia Nuamah and Charles Pascal, who had served as the Foundation's first full-time Executive Director from 1995 to 2010.

    Projects

    Atkinson Decent Work Fund

    Since 2014, the Atkinson Decent Work Fund has been a source of support for many projects aimed at making work decent and the economy equitable.

    Atkinson Fellowship in Public Policy

    Through the Atkinson Fellowship in Public Policy is a collaborative project between the Atkinson Foundation, the Honderich Family, and the Toronto Star through which they present an annual award to a "seasoned" Canadian journalist which includes funding for a year-long investigation into a current Canadian policy issue.

    Other Projects

    On May 13, 2018 the Atkinson Foundation named economist Armine Yalnizyan as the two-year Atkinson Fellow on the Future of Workers -- focused on collaborative research on "policy innovation for inclusive economic growth in an era of rapid technological change."

    In 2014 the Atkinson Foundation partnered with the Toronto Star to hire Sara Mojtehedzadeh as the "work and wealth" reporter; in 2017 they partnered to hire Carleton University graduate, journalist Sabrina Nanji to report on "democracy and democratic reform."

    Past Projects

    Economic Justice Fellowship Award

    Cathy Crowe CM, a "street nurse," educator, author, social justice activist and filmmaker, specializing in advocacy for the homeless in Canada, was the recipient of the Economic Justice Fellowship Award from the Atkinson Charitable Foundation in 2004 which was twice renewed.

    Cindy Blackstock OC FRSC, a Gitxsan activist for child welfare and executive director of the First Nations Child and Family Caring Society of Canada won the 2009 Economic Justice Fellowship Award.


    Additional Reading


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