Philanthropy has entered a defining moment. Once rooted in religious and aristocratic traditions, it has evolved into a global, professionalized, and technology-driven sector that simultaneously empowers and polarizes. This article synthesizes major transformations in the field and assesses their implications for non-profits, governments, and communities. It highlights how participatory and trust-based models expand flexibility yet risk deepening dependence on donors; how governments rely on philanthropy to fill welfare gaps; and how communities gain agency through democratized giving but remain overshadowed by elite philanthropy. The analysis underscores the enduring tension between altruism and influence, generosity and control. It argues that the future credibility of philanthropy depends on reconciling power with justice through participatory, feminist, and decolonial frameworks grounded in democratic accountability. By identifying key research directions, the article positions philanthropy not as an apolitical act of benevolence but as a dynamic political practice capable of advancing systemic equity in global civil society.
Anna Neya Kazanskaia (Wed,) studied this question.