Reviews"To assemble all this in one book requires courage, and Professor James shows she has it. The result is rewarding....The search for unity is irresistibly tempting, but the richness of diversity makes fascinating reading."--Voluntas"At some point, theory must be confronted by data to alert researchers to those "exceptions" which require a ethinnking of the theory. This volume makes a splendid start."--Journal of Economic Literature, "To assemble all this in one book requires courage, and Professor James shows she has it. The result is rewarding....The search for unity is irresistibly tempting, but the richness of diversity makes fascinating reading."-- Voluntas "At some point, theory must be confronted by data to alert researchers to those "exceptions" which require a ethinnking of the theory. This volume makes a splendid start."-- Journal of Economic Literature, 'This is a book made of very diverse material ... To assemble all this in one book requires courage, and Professor James shows she has it. The result is rewarding. I have found it beyond my capabilities to give a decent account of the wealth of case studies reported in the 376 pages of the book. The search for unity is irresistibly tempting, but the richness of diversity makes fascinating reading.'Voluntas, November 1990, "To assemble all this in one book requires courage, and Professor Jamesshows she has it. The result is rewarding....The search for unity isirresistibly tempting, but the richness of diversity makes fascinatingreading."--Voluntas, "To assemble all this in one book requires courage, and Professor James shows she has it. The result is rewarding....The search for unity is irresistibly tempting, but the richness of diversity makes fascinating reading."--Voluntas "At some point, theory must be confronted by data to alert researchers to those "exceptions" which require a ethinnking of the theory. This volume makes a splendid start."--Journal of Economic Literature, "At some point, theory must be confronted by data to alert researchers tothose "exceptions" which require a ethinnking of the theory. This volume makesa splendid start."--Journal of Economic Literature, "At some point, theory must be confronted by data to alert researchers to those "exceptions" which require a ethinnking of the theory. This volume makes a splendid start."--Journal of Economic Literature, "To assemble all this in one book requires courage, and Professor James shows she has it. The result is rewarding....The search for unity is irresistibly tempting, but the richness of diversity makes fascinating reading."--Voluntas
Dewey Edition19
Dewey Decimal338.7/4
SynopsisThis eclectic collection of essays adds new dimensions to the theory of nonprofit organizations and describes relevant policies that do or should exist in developing and developed countries., Arising as a market-induced improvement on existing governmental services and competing with the government for customers and resources, nonprofit organizations are a relatively unexplored area of public policy. This collection of essays, written by scholars from a variety of disciplines, adds new dimensions to the theory of nonprofit organizations, and describes the public policies regarding nonprofit organizations that do or should exist in both developing and developed countries. The contributors consider why governments subsidize such organizations, the problems such subsidies create, and the role played, from an international perspective, by religion and other ideological institutions in the founding and managing of nonprofit services., This is a collection of mostly original essays about the current picture of the international non-profit sector. It deals with the consequences of institutional choice in both industrialized and less-developed countries. England, Wales Sweden, Holland, Japan, Latin America, Austria, Germany, Sri Lanka, West Africa, and Chile are included in this volume, which forms part of the Yale Studies on Non-Profit Organizations Series.