The Criterion Institute Podcast

Joy Anderson

How do we disrupt the entrenched power dynamics in finance to advance a more equitable future? Join us for the Criterion Institute Podcast as Joy Anderson, a global thought leader in business and social change, leads us through a series of discussions, interviews, frameworks, rants, and re-frames that will help you better understand how to use finance as a tool for transformative systems change. Learn more by visiting us at www.criterioninstitute.org.

  1. Jun 4

    #80: What Are You Willing to See? Disruption, Fault Lines, and the Moments That Matter

    In this episode, Joy Anderson reframes one of the most common narratives in moments of crisis: instead of asking how to stabilize and return to normal, she asks what disruption makes visible. Building on earlier conversations about systems opportunities, she distinguishes between disruptive events and the deeper structural patterns they expose, and highlights how moments of volatility can make long-standing dynamics of power, risk, and inequity harder to ignore. The episode opens with a conversation with Rachel Sinha, a systems change practitioner and field builder, as the two explore the tensions inherent in building a field, from questions of legitimacy and power to who gets resourced and recognized. From there, Joy connects these themes to Criterion’s work on gender-based violence, feminist finance, and local capital, showing how disruption can reveal hidden costs and overlooked actors within financial systems. The episode ultimately challenges listeners to treat disruption as evidence and invites them to see systems more clearly and act with greater readiness. Episode Highlights 00:00 - Introduction to Systems Change and Disruption 02:49 - Building a Field of Systems Change Practice 06:05 - Power Dynamics in Systems Change 09:05 - Understanding Systems Opportunities 11:47 - Disruption as Revelation 15:09 - Examples of Systems Opportunities 18:00 - Responding to Disruption 20:51 - The Role of Communities in Systems Change 23:58 - Conclusion and Call to Action Relevant Links Criterion Institute Website and LinkedIn Joy's LinkedIn Rachel Sinha’s Linkedin Dive Deeper Framework for financing the prevention of gender-based violence A systems-level framework that explains how financial structures, incentives, and norms influence the persistence of gender-based violence and how finance can be used to prevent it. Fòs Feminista: Building Feminist Financial Infrastructure A case study showing how a feminist intermediary designs and uses financial and non-financial assets to reshape capital flows and build long-term movement-led financial infrastructure. Fostering a Feminist Financial Imagination: A Radical Conversation about Finance, Feminist Futures,… A publication that explores how reimagining financial systems can unlock new strategies and possibilities for advancing gender equality and social justice. Pacific Possibilities: Designing Better Financial Vehicles for the Pacific A report that outlines how to design investment vehicles grounded in local economic and social realities, rather than forcing existing financial models onto communities. Other episodes you might also like: #75: When the Moment Arrives: Acting on Systems Opportunities #78: Intermediation Is Not Overhead #58: Check List or Trust List: Power, Performance, and the Politics of Procedure #16: We Made This System Up, We Can Change It. Part of the ImpactAlpha Podcast Network

    34 min
  2. May 21

    #79: From Invitation to Trust: Rethinking Relationships in Finance

    In this episode, Joy Anderson reflects on invitation as a foundational practice for leadership, collaboration, and systems change. Moving beyond calendar invites, she reframes invitation as a form of power that determines whether participation is passive or meaningful. When people are explicitly invited into roles that matter, where their presence is needed and their contribution is clear, progress is made. In complex systems where hierarchy is unclear, invitation becomes the mechanism that supports coordination and shared purpose. Joy then reframes the notion of “handholding,” a common phrase in investing that often implies lack of capability. What is really being described, says Joy, is about trust, proximity, and power. Advice in investing is rarely neutral, especially when tied to capital, and what is presented as support can become control without permission and alignment. Drawing from work with the Mastercard Foundation African Growth Fund, she outlines four conditions that make for better and more balanced investment relationships: permission, boundaries, protection of vulnerability, and moments to recalibrate. Together, these help us to rethink how relationships are built and how influence operates within financial systems. Episode Highlights 00:00 Introduction to the episode and themes 01:49 Invitation as a form of power 04:14 Invitation in complex collaborations and consortiums 06:18 From presence to contribution: what invitation makes possible 08:40 Practices of invitation in leadership and systems change 10:03 Rant: unpacking the phrase “handholding” 12:30 Trust, vulnerability, and investment relationships 14:57 Permission, advice, and power in investing 17:03 Capacity, timing, and misalignment in support 19:02 Conditions for “handholding” as trust infrastructure 21:17 Reflection questions on relationships and influence 22:26 Ways to engage with Criterion Institute Relevant Links Criterion Institute Website and LinkedInJoy's LinkedIn Dive Deeper Disrupting Fields: Addressing Power Dynamics in the Fields of Climate Finance and Gender Lens Investing This report examines how power operates in emerging financial fields and how actors navigate existing systems while trying to change them. It highlights the tension between advancing new ideas and working within entrenched power structures, making it highly relevant to this episode’s focus on invitation, influence, and participation. Addressing Power Dynamics in Investment Processes A deep dive into how investment processes reflect and respond to power dynamics, including how trust, transparency, and engagement shape relationships between investors and companies. The report emphasizes the role of intentional design in building more equitable investment relationships. Process Metrics that Analyze Power Dynamics in Investing This report introduces tools for identifying and measuring how power shows up in investment processes—moving beyond representation to examine whose knowledge is valued and how decisions are made. It directly connects to the episode’s discussion of influence, control, and whose perspective shapes outcomes. Advanced Practice in Gender Lens Investing A framework for identifying and shifting power, privilege, and bias within financial systems by focusing on how investments are made. It highlights how changing processes—not just outcomes—can transform relationships and redistribute power in finance. Other episodes you might also like: #74: No Permission Required: Volunteerism as a Power Shift #68: Clarity is Relational: Leadership in Complex Systems #52: Reimagining Resourcing for Social Transformation – Part Two Part of the ImpactAlpha Podcast Network

    25 min
  3. May 7

    #78: Intermediation Is Not Overhead

    In this episode, Joy Anderson reflects on a renewed wave of conversations around innovative finance following recent funding disruptions across the feminist movement, particularly in the context of discussions surrounding the Women Deliver conference in Australia. Drawing from Criterion Institute’s long-standing work at the intersection of finance and social change, she introduces a set of reframes designed to move organizations beyond the narrow question of “how do we get more funding?” toward a deeper understanding of how capital actually moves within economic systems. The episode outlines seven key reframes. Through these reframes, Joy highlights the importance of financial infrastructure—intermediaries, instruments, and systems that structure relationships and shape power. Ultimately, the episode argues that sustainable and equitable movement-building depends not on accessing more money, but on intentionally designing the relationships and systems through which finance operates. ‍ Episode Highlights 00:00 - Introduction to Innovative Finance and Feminist Movements 05:14 - Understanding Economic Relationships in Movements 10:14 - The Role of Financial Intermediaries 15:08 - Reframing Funding and Economic Relationships 20:10 - Building Trust and Stability in Financial Systems Relevant Links Criterion Institute website and LinkedIn Joy’s LinkedIn Dive Deeper Criterion TOOLKIT Pacific Possibilities: Designing Better Financial Vehicles for the Pacific Fostering a Feminist Financial Imagination Other episodes you might also like: #75: When the Moment Arrives: Acting on Systems Opportunities #58: Check List or Trust List: Power, Performance, and the Politics of Procedure #63: From Scarcity to Power: Reimagining Finance for Feminist Movements ‍ Part of the ImpactAlpha Podcast Network ‍https://impactalpha.com/podcasts

    25 min
  4. Apr 23

    #77: Strength Is the Strategy: A Conversation on Movement‑Led Finance

    #77: Strength Is the Strategy: A Conversation on Movement‑Led Finance What happens when feminist movements stop asking permission—and start acting as asset owners? In this episode, Joy Anderson is joined by Giselle Carino and Meradith Leebrick of Fòs Feminista to explore how movement‑led organizations are building financial tools, institutions, and enterprises that sustain reproductive justice over the long term. In this conversation, they reflect on why organizational strength (governance, reserves, and financial discipline) is not separate from movement work but essential to it; how Fòs Feminista was deliberately designed by and for organizations in the Global South; and what it looks like to act as a financial intermediary without training wheels. They trace Fòs Feminista’s long history with innovative finance, dig into the creation and scaling of INNOVA Health Supplies as a feminist social enterprise, and challenge conventional assumptions about risk, collateral, and repayment, arguing instead for designing capital that matches the realities, time horizons, and power dynamics of real change. Episode Highlights 00:00 - Introduction to Fòs Feminista and Its Mission 02:50 The Concept of 'Fòs' and Its Origins 05:40 Building a Strong Ecosystem for Reproductive Justice 08:01 Organizational Stability and Movement Leadership 14:18 Innovative Finance Strategies in Reproductive Health 17:33 Collaborative Solutions for Sexual and Reproductive Health 22:15 Acting as Asset Owners in the Movement 30:11 Scaling Impact and Future Directions Relevant Links Criterion Institute website and LinkedInJoy’s LinkedInGiselle Carino, CEO, Fòs Feministahttps://www.linkedin.com/in/giselle-carino-937285102Meradith Leebrick, Lead, Social Innovation & Financing, Fòs Feministahttps://www.linkedin.com/in/meradith Mentioned in this Episode Fòs FeministaINNOVA Health SuppliesFeminist Impact Fund (Fòs Feminista) Dive Deeper Introducing Standards of Practice for Gender Lens InvestingProcess Metrics that Analyze Power Dynamics in InvestingDisrupting Fields: Addressing Power Dynamics in the Fields of Climate Finance and Gender Lens InvestingFostering a Feminist Financial Imagination Other episodes you might also like: #74: No Permission Required: Volunteerism as a Power Shift #72: From Add-on to Operating System: Rethinking the Role of Services in Local Value Creation #73: Search Funds Reframed: Expanding Access to Business Ownership #20: Shifting Power in Investment Practice: The Costs of Doing Business Part of the ImpactAlpha Podcast Network a...

    36 min
  5. Apr 9

    #76: Bring Your Expertise: Why AI Needs More Voices

    In this conversation, Joy Anderson and Mara Bolis discuss the intersection of gender lens investing and AI, highlighting the importance of diverse perspectives in shaping the future of technology. Mara shares her journey from working at Oxfam to exploring AI at the Kennedy School, and her reflections on addressing gender inequality in emerging technologies. They explore the challenges of navigating spaces traditionally dominated by experts and why it’s time to bring new types of knowledge into AI discussions. The conversation underscores the value of interdisciplinary approaches and the power of collective learning to empower underrepresented voices in the tech space. Episode Highlights 00:00 - Introduction to AI and Power Dynamics 03:11 - Imposter Syndrome and Interdisciplinary Leadership 06:06 - The Importance of Domain Expertise in AI 09:08 - Challenging Traditional Notions of Expertise 11:55 - The Role of Gender in Economic Systems 15:12 - Agency and Participation in AI Development 17:59 - Practical Tips for Engaging in AI 20:49 - Building Community and Learning Together Relevant Links Criterion Institute website and LinkedInJoy’s LinkedInMara's LinkedIn Dive Deeper Disrupting FieldsFostering a Feminist Financial ImaginationIntroducing Standards of Practice for Gender Lens Investing If enjoyed this episode, consider listening to “Knowledge and Power,” which offers language for recognizing and challenging whose expertise carries weight in decision‑making spaces, and “Disrupting Fields,” which looks at how authority, legitimacy, and participation take shape as new fields emerge. Part of the ImpactAlpha Podcast Network https://impactalpha.com/podcasts

    25 min
  6. Mar 12

    #74: No Permission Required: Volunteerism as a Power Shift

    In this episode of The Criterion Institute Podcast, Joy Anderson reflects on the often-overlooked power of volunteerism and voluntary association as a foundational force in civic life, democracy, and systems change. Drawing on history, personal experience, and Criterion’s own organizational design, Joy explores how spaces that are not governed by markets, paychecks, or formal permission create access, shift power, and allow people to learn, belong, and act together. She traces the evolution from early American voluntary associations to modern professionalized nonprofits, questioning when expertise became a gate and why unpaid work is so often dismissed as less valuable. At its heart, this episode is an invitation to reconsider freedom of association—not as charity or secondary labor, but as a vital way we build communities, share power, and sustain ourselves beyond our formal professional lives. Episode Highlights 00:00 Introduction 00:29 Joy Anderson's Background and the Foundation of Criterion 01:25 The Significance of Access and Volunteerism in Civic Life 02:25 Historical Roots of Voluntary Associations in America 03:11 Early 19th Century Social Reform Movements 04:05 The Proliferation of Voluntary Associations in the 19th Century 05:28 The Shift to Professionalization of Nonprofits 07:21 Benefits and Barriers of Professionalism in Volunteer Work 09:35 The Value of Informal Economies and Voluntary Association 10:53 Community and Volunteerism at Criterion Institute 12:47 The Power of Free Association and Its Social Impact 14:13 Volunteering as a Form of Community Building 16:39 Opportunities for Engagement with Criterion Institute 18:22 Closing Remarks and How to Get Involved Relevant Links Criterion Institute website and LinkedInJoy’s LinkedInVolunteer at Criterion Part of the ImpactAlpha Podcast Network https://impactalpha.com/podcasts

    19 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
3 Ratings

About

How do we disrupt the entrenched power dynamics in finance to advance a more equitable future? Join us for the Criterion Institute Podcast as Joy Anderson, a global thought leader in business and social change, leads us through a series of discussions, interviews, frameworks, rants, and re-frames that will help you better understand how to use finance as a tool for transformative systems change. Learn more by visiting us at www.criterioninstitute.org.

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