"What is the nonprofit sector and why does it exist? Some of the most creative minds in the field of nonprofit studies from around the world provide answers to these questions, and critique and expand both existing sector theory and new sector theories"--
"What is the nonprofit sector and why does it exist? Some of the most creative minds in the field of nonprofit studies from around the world provide answers to these questions, and critique and expand both existing sector theory and new sector theories"--Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
1. An invitation to rethink the nonprofit sector Curtis Child and Eva Witesman; 2. An overview of nonprofit sector theories Curtis Child; 3. The prevalence of traditional nonprofit sector theories in research Megan LePere-Schloop and Rebecca Nesbit; 4. What makes good nonprofit sector theory? Eva Witesman; 5. Sector theorists should consider how social values determine unmet needs Ruth K. Hansen and Gregory R. Witkowski; 6. Sector theorists should embrace a social economy perspective Laurie Mook and John R. Whitman; 7. Sector theorists should expand three-failures theory to include the family sector and varied forms of government Richard Steinberg, Eleanor Brown and Liza L. Taylor; 8. Sector theorists should beware the nonprofit industrial complex Ana Clarissa Rojas Durazo; 9. Sector theorists should be inclusive of muslim and non-western perspectives Shariq Siddiqui; 10. Sector theorists should revisit the role of information George E. Mitchell and Jason Coupet; 11. Sector theorists should borrow epistemologies Elizabeth A. Castillo; 12. Nonprofits as organizational actors Patricia Bromley and Heitor Santos; 13. Nonprofits as enablers of multilayered representation Catherine E. Wilson; 14. Nonprofits as facilitators of national self-development Ada Ordor; 15. Nonprofits as part of an engineered social economy Meeyoung Lamothe, Jiwon Suh, Misun Lee, Hee Soun Jang, Bok Gyo Jeong and Seongho An; 16. Nonprofits as shaped by the ruling party Ming Hu and Yung-Pin Lu; 17. Nonprofits as sources of regime stability Yulia Skokova and Irina Krasnopolskaya; 18. Nonprofits as creators of transformative symbolic reality Robert W. Ressler; 19. Nonprofits as distributors of toll goods Eva Witesman; 20. Nonprofits as agents of moral authority Robbie Waters Robichau and Kandyce Fernandez; 21. Conclusions Eva Witesman and Curtis Child.
1. An invitation to rethink the nonprofit sector Curtis Child and Eva Witesman; 2. An overview of nonprofit sector theories Curtis Child; 3. The prevalence of traditional nonprofit sector theories in research Megan LePere-Schloop and Rebecca Nesbit; 4. What makes good nonprofit sector theory? Eva Witesman; 5. Sector theorists should consider how social values determine unmet needs Ruth K. Hansen and Gregory R. Witkowski; 6. Sector theorists should embrace a social economy perspective Laurie Mook and John R. Whitman; 7. Sector theorists should expand three-failures theory to include the family sector and varied forms of government Richard Steinberg, Eleanor Brown and Liza L. Taylor; 8. Sector theorists should beware the nonprofit industrial complex Ana Clarissa Rojas Durazo; 9. Sector theorists should be inclusive of muslim and non-western perspectives Shariq Siddiqui; 10. Sector theorists should revisit the role of information George E. Mitchell and Jason Coupet; 11. Sector theorists should borrow epistemologies Elizabeth A. Castillo; 12. Nonprofits as organizational actors Patricia Bromley and Heitor Santos; 13. Nonprofits as enablers of multilayered representation Catherine E. Wilson; 14. Nonprofits as facilitators of national self-development Ada Ordor; 15. Nonprofits as part of an engineered social economy Meeyoung Lamothe, Jiwon Suh, Misun Lee, Hee Soun Jang, Bok Gyo Jeong and Seongho An; 16. Nonprofits as shaped by the ruling party Ming Hu and Yung-Pin Lu; 17. Nonprofits as sources of regime stability Yulia Skokova and Irina Krasnopolskaya; 18. Nonprofits as creators of transformative symbolic reality Robert W. Ressler; 19. Nonprofits as distributors of toll goods Eva Witesman; 20. Nonprofits as agents of moral authority Robbie Waters Robichau and Kandyce Fernandez; 21. Conclusions Eva Witesman and Curtis Child.
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