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Phillips Foundation Gives SMU $1.7M Grant for SMU Impact Lab » Dallas Innovates

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Southern Methodist University in Dallas has received a $1.7 million multiyear grant from Phillips Foundation to establish the SMU Impact Lab, a student-focused initiative to invest in commercial opportunities that produce substantial financial and social returns.

A collaboration between the University’s Meadows School of the Arts and Cox School of Business, the SMU Impact Lab aims to equip the next generation of SMU students to understand impact investing through education and practice. 

‘Investing for the greater good’

“The SMU Impact Lab is an exceptional resource center for our University that is designed for those interested in investing for the greater good,” Samuel S. Holland, Algur H. Dean of SMU Meadows School of the Arts, said in a statement. “The gift from Phillips Foundation will be invaluable to the program and support our larger SMU community interested in positive impact alongside their passions and careers.”

The university said the lab will also enrich the social entrepreneurship ecosystem in North Texas.

The SMU Impact Lab will provide students, faculty, and alumni the opportunity to invest in solutions to complex community problems.

The lab combines the social, creative, and arts entrepreneurship programs of the Meadows School of the Arts and the traditional investing and financial expertise of the Cox School of Business, the university said.

Via hands-on experiences, students across the campus will evaluate investable opportunities for both measurable social impact and financial returns.

Aligning ‘profits and purpose’

SMU said that a portion of the Phillips Foundation’s grant will support its existing Real Estate Impact Investment Fund, a student-led fund recently created to spur innovative investment in underserved communities throughout North Texas.

The experiential learning fund targets a blended investment approach that considers both financial and impact metrics and focuses on real estate opportunities in overlooked neighborhoods.

SMU said that profits are split equally between ongoing support of the fund’s diverse portfolio and a scholarship program to benefit real estate-focused students at SMU.

“This fund gives students practical learning experiences in the constantly shifting real estate markets of DFW and North Texas. It will also enable us to create opportunities for future generations of students by providing scholarships powered by the fund’s investments,” Joseph Cahoon, director of the Cox School’s Folsom Institute for Real Estate and professor of practice in real estate, said in a statement.

The grant from Phillips Foundation adds to SMU Ignited: Boldly Shaping Tomorrow, SMU’s multiyear $1.5 billion campaign for impact. The grant furthers the campaign’s goals to enrich teaching and research and enhance the SMU campus and community for future generations.

“We selected SMU as a collaborator on this initiative after identifying that this region needs an engine for social innovation and impact investing education in particular,” Elizabeth Carlock Phillips, executive director of Phillips Foundation, said in a statement. “As Phillips Foundation has learned in practice, it is possible to align profits and purpose. We are excited for the SMU Impact Lab to equip and inspire a new generation of impact investors and social entrepreneurs.”

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R E A D   N E X T

  • The Bobby B. Lyle School of Engineering at SMU

    The gift from Mary and Richard Templeton—recognized leaders in Dallas philanthropy and technology—will fund strategic initiatives for research and educational access, as well as naming and endowing the school’s dean position. “The Lyle School has a proven reputation for building future leaders who are unafraid to ask big questions,” Mary Templeton said. “Rich and I are eager to see how our gift will support that kind of innovative thinking.”

  • The Dallas Foundation’s 2022 Field of Interest grants aim to assist 51 organizations embracing a wide range of issues—including the arts, critical needs, children and families, animal welfare, and more. Here’s the full list of recipients.

  • The goal of SMU’s Intelligent Systems and Bias Examination Lab (ISaBEL) is to quantify and minimize bias in artificial intelligence systems. It will explore how AI systems—like facial recognition algorithms—perform on a wide range of diverse people. The Lab will investigate ways that bias can be reduced in these systems through cutting-edge research, standards, and other peer-reviewed studies.

  • Collectively, the 100 privately held companies contributed $9 billion to the Dallas-Fort Worth economy from 2019 to 2021—creating over 12,000 jobs with average sales growth of 141%. Irving-based ShiftKey, which connects healthcare professionals with healthcare facilities that have immediate shift vacancies, took the top spot in the annual rankings. Here’s the complete list.

  • Global Silicon Valley’s Michael Moe is teaming up with Hoque Global CEO Mike Hoque on the inaugural SMU+GSV Mission Summit in May. GSV recently moved its headquarters from Northern California to downtown Dallas’ historic Adolphus building.

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