Social Venture Network. Business for Social Responsibility. Net Impact. Grameen Telecom. Some of the most well-known names in progressive and socially-responsible businesses share a common touchpoint: Josh Mailman. Son of the late Joseph Mailman, founder of a knife and razor company that grew into the conglomerate Mailman Corporation, Josh emulates his father’s entrepreneurial (and philanthropic) spirit—always on the lookout for the next big idea.
For the younger Mailman, social activism is a natural outgrowth of political activism in the 1960s and 70s. That activism defines his philanthropy to this day. “I back agitators, instigators, and organizers,” says Mailman. “Those are the people that get stuff done.”
Mailman is a trailblazer in impact investing, having provided seed money for Stonyfield Farms, Seventh Generation, and dozens of other successful, socially-minded businesses. Meanwhile, he’s been a major proponent of corporate social responsibility. As founder of the Threshold Foundation, Mailman has rallied other philanthropists to join him in building movements to change the world.
Mailman’s philanthropic purview is simultaneously local and global, from Grameen Phone in Bangladesh, to the Middle East, where he proposed a Muslim version of the MacArthur genius awards, to supporting native peoples and communities. All of these disparate investments share a common thread: Mailman’s strong commitment to like-minded “activist entrepreneurs” like himself.
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- Advancing corporate accountability: Josh Mailman describes the Rainforest Action Network’s successful campaigns to stop environmental abuses
- Building movements, not structures: Josh Mailman funds communities of people
- Businesses for societal good: Josh Mailman describes why he works with for-profits to create change
- Collaborating for social change: Josh Mailman joins forces to spread his philanthropy abroad
- For profit or nonprofit? Josh Mailman favors mission-driven business models
- Future of philanthropy: Josh Mailman sees a number of new trends that may change giving
- Getting on the list: Josh Mailman describes the movement towards socially responsible business
- “Great and pure individuals”: Josh Mailman on what makes social change possible
- How Josh Mailman chooses grantees for the Sigrid Rausing Trust
- “It’s not what you have, it’s what you give”: Josh Mailman learned the value of giving during his childhood
- Josh Mailman grew from a young activist to supporting activism through his philanthropy
- “Muslim MacArthurs:” Josh Mailman gets behind social entrepreneurs in the Middle East
- “Put a stake in the ground”: Josh Mailman advises new philanthropists to set a goal and break new ground
- Putting impact investing to work: Josh Mailman wants to change the world, not just make money
- Restoring the Threshold Foundation: Josh Mailman takes over a foundation and makes it his own
- Seeding Serious Change: Josh Mailman gives “first money” to social enterprises
- See it, film it, change it: Josh Mailman delves into digital advocacy
- Standing up and standing out: Josh Mailman works to support moral leadership through investments in companies and nonprofits
- Success story: Josh Mailman describes the origins and significance of Grameen Phone