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360Giving Data Standard

Regranting consultation

19 April 2022

By 360Giving team

Consultation on proposed changes to the 360Giving Data Standard as a result of research into regranting and multi-funder collaborations

Over the past three months, 360Giving has been exploring issues related to regranting and multi-funder collaboration. We published a blog on the topic which you can read here.

This consultation sets out the details of a proposed update to the 360Giving Data Standard arising from this research and implications of those changes, and invites feedback from our stakeholders via our survey (which should take no longer than ten minutes). The deadline is at 5pm on Friday 6th May.

A chart showing the flow of regranting from grantmakers to other grantmaking organisations and on to other charities and communities.

Regranting type codelist

We are proposing a new classification, Regranting Type, which will allow funders to identify the grants they give out for redistribution or as part of multi-funder collaborations.

Why is this new classification being proposed?

The regranting classification allows funders to show when a grant is intended for onward distribution, or part of a multi-funder collaboration.

In published 360Giving data, it is not currently possible to distinguish between grants that are going to an intermediary or directly to an end recipient, or between grants that are one part of a programme or initiative involving multiple funders. It is hoped that this classification will help to increase the visibility of regranted funds, allowing funders to provide more useful context about their grants, 360Giving tools to flag regranting, and users to analyse the data more accurately.

The classification allows funders to indicate, for example, if a grant is part of a match funding initiative or other funder collaboration, an endowment to establish a new grantmaker or given to a fiscal sponsor acting as an agent for the funder. The classification of types of regrant and terms used have been identified through interviews with funders, research into published 360Giving data and desk research by 360Giving staff members.

The classification would apply at the level of an individual grant. It may be useful for funders who publish grants intended for regranting and grants that form part of multi-funder collaborations.

Impact on existing publishers and users of the 360Giving Data Standard

The proposed change would introduce a new optional codelist in the 360Giving Data Standard, which means it is a backwards compatible change, known as a MINOR update. You can read about the governance and revision control process for the Standard here.

When can we expect to see this change rolled out?

Subject to a successful consultation, we expect to be able to implement this new codelist in the Standard by summer 2022.

We’d love to hear from you about whether this classification would be useful – have your say by completing our consultation form below. And please do share this consultation with any person or organisation which is interested in understanding open data on regranting better.

Other ideas we’ve considered

Our research into the topic of regranting and multifunder collaborations prompted us to consider a range of ways to allow funders to identify when their grants are for regranting. We are proposing the introduction of a classification that can be applied at grant level because we think it provides the right balance of simplicity to use for funders and users, while allowing for some nuances about the type of regrant or multi-funder collaboration.

We also considered the following options:

Have your say

Complete our survey here 360Giving Consultation Survey – Regranting