Fr. 90.00

Appealing to the Crowd - The Ethical, Political, Practical Dimensions of Donation Based

English · Hardback

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Description

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Donation-based crowdfunding is an increasingly common and visible practice where campaigners ask friends, family, and even complete strangers for help. It isn't unusual to see these campaigns in the news and on social media following a tragedy or disaster and they have helped millions of people. However, crowdfunding also creates serious ethical and political problems, including undermining privacy, worsening social inequities and injustices, and encouraging fraud and misinformation. This book presents these concerns in the context of more traditional giving practices. It ends with values to guide crowdfunding and suggestions for how to engage in crowdfunding in less problematic ways.

List of contents










  • Introduction

  • Chapter One: Giving and the Rise of Crowdfunding

  • Chapter Two: Crowding Out Privacy

  • Chapter Three: Proving Your Worth

  • Chapter Four: Who Gets Funded?

  • Chapter Five: Missing and Masking Injustice

  • Chapter Six: Crowdfrauding

  • Chapter Seven : Misinformation and Hate

  • Chapter Eight: Crowdfunding during a Pandemic

  • Chapter Nine: Crowdfunding as a Mediated Practice

  • Conclusion: Making Crowdfunding More Appealing

  • Bibliography

  • Index



About the author

Jeremy Snyder is a Professor in the Faculty of Health Sciences at Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, British Columbia, where he has been a faculty member since 2007. He is the author of Exploiting Hope (Oxford University Press, 2020).

Summary

This is an open access title available under the terms of a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 license. It is free to read on Oxford Academic and offered as a free PDF download from OUP and selected open access locations.

This book offers a close examination of the ethical, political, and practical dimensions of donation-based online crowdfunding for basic needs including medical treatment, housing, food, and education. Crowdfunding uses online platforms and social networks to raise money from friends, family, and complete strangers for a variety of projects and needs. This practice has grown massively worldwide in recent years in terms of the numbers of crowdfunding campaigns and donors, money raised, visibility, and cultural influence.

While the money raised through crowdfunding has helped millions of recipients, there is also reason for concern around how it may undermine campaigners' privacy and dignity, mirror and exacerbate social inequities, mask and deepen social injustice, defraud donors, and spread misinformation and hate. Author Jeremy Snyder places this discussion of crowdfunding in the wider historical and ethical context of giving practices. In doing so, Snyder shows that crowdfunding can repeat and exacerbate problems with traditional giving practices while creating other, new problems.

Snyder concludes by presenting nine values that should guide donation-based crowdfunding: benefit, choice, solidarity, privacy, dignity, equity, social justice, non-maleficence, and accountability. These values can help crowdfunding donors, campaigners, recipients, platforms, and policy makers preserve the good that can come from crowdfunding while addressing some of its many negative aspects.

Additional text

In Appealing to the Crowd, Jeremy Snyder offers a sweeping philosophical and ethical assessment of crowdfunding for basic needs. Written by one of the foremost scholars of crowdfunding, this book is a highly approachable and applicable guide for navigating the muddy ethical waters of this new philanthropic ecosystem.

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