The Third Sector: Community Organizations, NGOs, and Nonprofits

The Third Sector: Community Organizations, NGOs, and Nonprofits

by Meghan Kallman, Terry Clark
The Third Sector: Community Organizations, NGOs, and Nonprofits

The Third Sector: Community Organizations, NGOs, and Nonprofits

by Meghan Kallman, Terry Clark

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Overview

Civil society organizations, nonprofits, national and international nongovernmental organizations, and a variety of formal and informal associations have coalesced into a world political force. Though the components of this so-called third sector vary by country, their cumulative effects play an ever-greater role in global affairs. Looking at relief and welfare organizations, innovation organizations, social networks, and many other kinds of groups, Meghan Elizabeth Kallman and Terry Nichols Clark explore the functions, impacts, and composition of the nonprofit sector in six key countries. Chinese organizations, for example, follow the predominantly Asian model of government funding that links their mission to national political goals. Western groups, by contrast, often explicitly challenge government objectives, and even gain relevance and cache by doing so. In addition, Kallman and Clark examine groups in real-world contexts, providing a wealth of political-historical background, in-depth consideration of interactions with state institutions, region-by-region comparisons, and suggestions for how groups can borrow policy options across systems. Insightful and forward-seeing, The Third Sector provides a rare international view of organizations and agendas driving change in today's international affairs.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780252040436
Publisher: University of Illinois Press
Publication date: 10/17/2016
Pages: 268
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Meghan Elizabeth Kallman is an assistant professor in the School for Global Inclusion and Social Development at the University of Massachusetts Boston. Terry Nichols Clark is a professor of sociology at the University of Chicago and the coauthor of The Breakdown of Class Politics: A Debate on Post-Industrial Stratification.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations ix

Acknowledgments xi

Introduction: Democratic Governance and Institutional Logics within the Third Sector (or, How Habermas Discovered the Coffee House) 1

1 Civil Society, Social Capital, and the Growth of the Third Sector 37

2 The United States 68

3 France 105

4 Japan 124

5 South Korea 141

6 Taiwan 155

7 China 169

8 Looking Forward: Understanding Associations and Trust Patterns 191

Conclusion: Global Themes 213

References 227

Index 249

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