Our mission is to expand bioethics knowledge to improve clinical, biomedical, and public health decision-making, policy, and practice.
What We Do
The Greenwall Foundation seeks to make bioethics integral to decisions in health care, policy, and research. It is a nationally recognized private foundation with assets of about $100 million, awarding approximately $3-4 million annually in support of its mission to expand bioethics knowledge to improve clinical, biomedical, and public health decision-making, policy, and practice.
The Foundation primarily funds bioethics research through two grant programs: the Faculty Scholars Program and the Making a Difference program. The Foundation’s Faculty Scholars Program makes career development awards to enable junior faculty members to carry out innovative bioethics research. Through this program, the Foundation supports research that goes beyond current work in bioethics to help resolve pressing ethical issues and creates a community that enhances future bioethics research by Scholars and Alumni/ae.
The Making a Difference program supports research projects that help resolve important emerging or unanswered bioethics problems. The Foundation’s aim through this program is to fund projects that promote the Foundation’s vision and mission through forward-looking bioethics research that will have a real-world, practical impact.
Learn About Our Strategy
Visit our Strategy page to learn more about what drives us and the strategic priorities that guide our work.
In 1949, Frank Greenwall and his wife Anna Alexander Greenwall established a small family foundation in memory of their daughter, Susan. The Foundation’s goals were mostly general in nature, such as providing scholarships and fellowships “for worthy and qualified students without regard to sex, age, nationality, race, creed or color.” A more specific goal, however, was to help conduct medical research and spread knowledge on “the nature, cause, prevention, cure, treatment and alleviation of children’s diseases of all kinds.”
Frank Greenwall was the CEO of National Starch Products, Inc., later to become National Starch and Chemical Corporation, and contributed his personal money in addition to National Starch stock to the Foundation. Upon his death, $20 million was contributed from his estate. In addition to medical-related grantmaking, the Foundation built a robust program to support small and midsize New York City arts organizations, especially those fostering experimentation and the creation of new and interdisciplinary work.
In the late 1980s, the Foundation’s Board became increasingly interested in another developing area—bioethics. There was no other foundation with a clearly defined program in bioethics, and in 1991, an “Interdisciplinary Program in Bioethics” became part of the Foundation’s mission. Over the next few decades, the bioethics program continued to grow, and in 2011, the Foundation decided to conclude the arts program to focus solely on bioethics.
At that time, the Foundation determined that it would focus primarily on building and enriching its flagship Greenwall Faculty Scholars Program in Bioethics.
The Foundation decided that support for bioethics research is an important need and that it could have the most impact by continuing to invest in people who would become future leaders in the field – young scholars who over their careers will address a number of important bioethics issues and train subsequent generations of bioethics researchers.
In 2013, the Foundation rebranded its program for bioethics grants outside the Faculty Scholars Program as the Making a Difference in Real-World Bioethics Dilemmas initiative, which was designed to support research to help resolve an important emerging or unanswered bioethics problem in clinical, biomedical, or public health decision-making, policy, or practice.
Read more about the Foundation’s first 50 years
here.
Read more about the history of the Foundation’s Program in Arts and Humanities
here.
Read more about the Foundation’s early bioethics programs
here.