• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

NGOs.AI

AI in Action

  • Home
  • AI for NGOs
  • Case Stories
  • AI Project Ideas for NGOs
  • Contact
You are here: Home / Category / Beyond Funding: How Philanthropy Must Engage with AI

Beyond Funding: How Philanthropy Must Engage with AI

Dated: December 23, 2025

Artificial intelligence is often framed as a tool capable of faster, cheaper, and large-scale operations, making it particularly appealing to philanthropy. AI promises better targeting of welfare, insights from complex data, and new ways to reach historically underserved communities. However, Dr. Sarayu Natarajan, Founder of the Aapti Institute, emphasized at the Asia-Pacific Meeting on AI and Philanthropy that treating AI as just another tool overlooks the distinctive conditions shaping its development. These include the concentration of data and influence in a few private companies, the retreat of governments from parts of public life, and digital systems that fragment shared understanding of the world. These factors not only determine AI’s capabilities but also its societal impact.

For philanthropy, the question is no longer whether AI will have an impact, but what role philanthropic actors choose to play within this ecosystem. Natarajan noted that philanthropy is often absent from AI governance and policy discussions, even though its values are directly implicated. Entering the conversation late risks endorsing standards already set and harms already occurring. She framed philanthropy’s responsibilities as twofold: doing more of the good, and doing less of the harm.

Doing more of the good involves supporting public-interest AI—technology designed for equity rather than profit or scale. Examples include language-based tools that help individuals access government services, particularly in multilingual contexts where language barriers can exacerbate exclusion. Philanthropy can invest in inclusive data, better oversight, and capacity-building to ensure such tools are effective.

Capacity is as critical as data. Many organizations and communities hold rich qualitative knowledge but lack the means to analyze or act on it. AI can help integrate insights from qualitative material, enabling philanthropies and governments to identify patterns, target support efficiently, and reconsider metrics of impact. Natarajan emphasized that technological failure is often human in origin: systems fail when they ignore how people live and make decisions, highlighting the importance of supporting users alongside funding technology.

The second responsibility, limiting harm, is more complex but equally vital. AI poses risks to democracy through the rapid spread of misinformation, influences personal freedoms subtly via algorithmic shaping of choices, and has significant environmental impacts due to its resource demands. Philanthropy can help by funding research, public discourse, and initiatives that prioritize ethical, social, and environmental goals, even when such efforts are politically or operationally challenging.

Despite the risks, Natarajan argued that AI can be transformative if used carefully. Effective use requires long-term funding for public-interest technology, ethical decision-making in daily practice, and support for initiatives prioritizing social and environmental outcomes. She concluded by stressing that philanthropy must act with confidence and purpose, shaping the conditions in which AI is built and used to ensure care, inclusion, and accountability.

Primary Sidebar

Banner about funding challenges for NGOs in India today, with circular photos of children reading and a grayscale image of children wrapped in blankets on the right.

Funding Challenges Faced by NGOs in India Today (And How to Overcome Them)

Illustration about estimating NGO project costs for successful grant proposals, featuring a money jar, a dollar sign in a broken egg, and a cloud with a dollar sign.

How NGOs Can Estimate Project Costs for Successful Grant Proposals

Collage showing U.S. Capitol, a funds icon with an arrow, and people receiving aid, for an article about defunding NGOs.

Did the U.S. Try to Defund NGOs? Understanding the Policy Changes and Their Impact

Six professionals of diverse backgrounds sit around a conference table with laptops, a futuristic AI graphic and the UN emblem on a blue wall behind them.

What the UN’s AI for Good Global Summit 2026 Means for NGOs

92% of Nonprofits Now Use AI—But Few Have Unlocked Its Full Potential

Futuristic humanoid robot facing left, with glowing blue eyes amid a data-filled, neon blue background.

AI May Affect Nearly 80 Million Workers in ASEAN, but Major Job Disruption Not Yet Seen

Slogan 'Scale Your NGO with AI' shown alongside a circuit-board AI chip on the right and a light abstract background.

How Small NGOs Can Scale Their Impact Using AI

Banner text: '$150M AI BOOST FOR NONPROFITS' on a black background with blue-purple neon swooshes, conveying funding for nonprofits' AI initiative

Anthropic Launches Claude Corps to Help Nonprofits Adopt AI

Bold headline 'SMART AI SMARTER IMPACT' on a pale blue background with circuit-pattern accents along the edges.

Can NGOs Use AI Responsibly? Best Practices for 2026

Banner with the title 'Beyond the Proposal' and subtitle 'What Funders Really Evaluate' on a pale background, plus a rounded photo on the right showing a blue label that says 'Evidence'.

What Evidence Do Funders Actually Look for Before Approving Grants?

Title graphic reading 'AI vs Traditional Proposal Writing' with blue gradient shapes in a pale background.

AI vs. Traditional Proposal Writing: What Every NGO Should Know

Banner with light blue background and decorative blue geometric shapes in the corners, displaying the title "UN's Vision For AI" in large serif font.

United Nations Launches AI for Good Global Commission to Promote Responsible AI

Illustration featuring the phrase 'Digital Literacy = Higher Impact' with a laptop, cup, tablet and pencil on a light beige background (informational banner).

Digital Literacy: Your NGO’s Guide to Thriving in 2026

Two smiling children outdoors beside a bold magenta panel that says TELL BETTER STORIES.

Storytelling for Change: Why Every NGO Needs to Tell Better Stories

Bold banner: headline 'Empowering Women Through Partnerships' with a smiling woman in a beige blazer on the right in a rounded frame.

How an NGO–Corporate Partnership Is Creating New Economic Opportunities for Women in India

Poster title: The Hidden Cost of AI for NGOs, with abstract blue wave lines in the background

The Trust Deficit: Why AI Is Making NGO Transparency More Important Than Ever in 2026

Banner reading 'Local NGOs. Global Impact.' in bold dark blue text on a pale blue background with abstract dark-blue curves in the corners suitability for a promo page.

Why More NGOs Are Moving Toward Locally Led Development in 2026

Hands typing on a silver laptop; circular crop on a beige banner for an article titled 'Where Do I Even Begin?'

Why Starting a Grant Proposal Is So Difficult

Bold headline: 'A STRONG BUDGET BUILDS TRUST' on a pale yellow panel; on the right is a black-and-white sketch of a person holding a tablet; a rounded yellow 'READ MORE' button appears near the bottom.

Grant Budgeting in 2026: Everything NGOs Need to Know

Left: hands typing on a laptop at a wooden desk with a notebook, scissors, and ruler; right: beige panel with the bold headline 'Make Your Proposal Impossible to Ignore'

Here are 10 ways to make your proposal stand out in 2026

Three-panel illustration of people holding sheets labeled Output, Outcome, and Impact, from left to right, in a light abstract background.

Outputs vs. Outcomes vs. Impact: A Simple Guide for Grant Writers

Handshake between two people in business attire inside a rounded banner, symbolizing collaboration; slogan: 'When NGOs & Businesses Work Together'.

How Companies Can Partner with NGOs for Greater Impact

Close-up of a hand holding a small note that says 'NGO' against a gradient background with large text 'Guide to NGO Sustainability'.

Sustainability Explained: What Every NGO Should Know

Before You Apply: The Ultimate NGO Grant Readiness Checklist

Equal AI Raises US$30 Million Series B Funding to Scale India’s AI Assistant

© NGOs.AI. All rights reserved.

Grants Management And Research Pte. Ltd., 21 Merchant Road #04-01 Singapore 058267

Manage Consent
To provide the best experiences, we use technologies like cookies to store and/or access device information. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behavior or unique IDs on this site. Not consenting or withdrawing consent, may adversely affect certain features and functions.
Functional Always active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes. The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.
  • Manage options
  • Manage services
  • Manage {vendor_count} vendors
  • Read more about these purposes
View preferences
  • {title}
  • {title}
  • {title}