Claim Details

View detailed information about this claim and its related sources.

Back to Claims

Claim Information

Complete details about this extracted claim.

Claim Text
It doesn’t always have to be corporations pushing charities to behave in a way they don’t want to,” said Sehoon Kim, Ph.D., a professor of finance at the University of Florida and senior author of the new study.
Simplified Text
Corporations do not always push charities to behave in unwanted ways according to Sehoon Kim.
Confidence Score
0.900
Claim Maker
Sehoon Kim
Context Type
News Article
Context Details
{
    "role": "Senior author",
    "speaker": "Sehoon Kim",
    "affiliation": "University of Florida",
    "study_focus": "Charity behavior"
}
UUID
9fdb383b-b041-4aba-a2d3-c44e421534b8
Vector Index
✗ No vector
Created
September 12, 2025 at 1:01 AM (1 day ago)
Last Updated
September 12, 2025 at 1:01 AM (1 day ago)

Original Sources for this Claim (1)

All source submissions that originally contained this claim.

Screenshot of https://news.ufl.edu/2025/04/charity-lobbying/
https://news.ufl.edu/2025/04/charity-lobbying/

A study reveals charities with corporate board members spend $130,000 annually lobbying for connected companies. This quid pro quo arrangement raises concerns about political influence, though it remains legal.

Charity
Lobbying
Corporate Influence
Political Influence
Nonprofit
Research
Governance

Similar Claims (0)

Other claims identified as semantically similar to this one.

No similar claims found

This claim appears to be unique in the system.

Claim Management System - MVP