Bill Pitkin
Bill Pitkin is a senior policy fellow in the Research to Action Lab at the Urban Institute. He leads work on upward mobility, housing, and racial equity. Pitkin has worked at the intersection of research, policy, and social change for nearly three decades in nonprofit, philanthropic, and academic sectors. Pitkin has advised leading foundations and nonprofit organizations on strategy and catalyzing social equity through investments in collaborative leadership and systems change, and he has served as professor of practice at the Pardee RAND Graduate School. He spent more than a decade at the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation, where he developed and directed US programs. Among his accomplishments at Hilton, he helped establish such models as the Home for Good Funders Collaborative, Los Angeles County’s pay for success initiative, and the Los Angeles County Flexible Housing Subsidy Pool. Pitkin served on the Funders Together to End Homelessness board of directors from 2008 to 2021 (and was chair from 2015 to 2018) and is a fellow at FrameWorks Institute and advisory board member of the UCLA Lewis Center for Regional Policy Studies. He holds MA and PhD degrees in urban planning from University of California, Los Angeles.
Presentations from Facing Race 2024
There’s No Upward Mobility Without Racial Equity: Tools and Processes for Making Structural Progress
Upward mobility and collective prosperity cannot be achieved without racial equity. Structural inequities have excluded people from thriving in ways that improve their lives and opportunities for the next generations. A key starting point to addressing this is to strengthen the ability of local leaders to diagnose structural challenges and identify structural solutions. In this workshop, attendees will learn about the Upward Mobility Framework and the Equity Scoring Initiative as tools for facilitating measurable accountability to structurally oriented equity and mobility commitments. Presenters will demonstrate the connections between economic and social success and racial equity, share examples of how to operationalize these frameworks, and leave attendees with guidance for using them in their spheres of practice.
Speakers: Kimberly Burrowes, Karishma Furtado, Bill Pitkin