Fr. 35.50

Making the Nonprofit Sector in the United States - A Reader

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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Burlingame and David C. Hammack, general editors

List of contents










Introduction

I. British and Colonial Patterns

One. Colonial Theory: Established Churches

1. The Statute of Charitable Uses, 1601

2. The Elizabethan Poor Law, 1601

3. Report to the Viceroy of Mexico on Conditions at Santa Fe, 1601

4. A Model of Christian Charity, 1630

5. Virginia General Assembly, Laws Regulating Conduct and Religion, 1642

6. New England's First Fruits, 1643

7. Account of the Ceremony Proclaiming New France, 1671

Two. Colonial Reality: Religious Diversity

8. Remonstrance against the Law against Quakers, 1657

9. Virginia's Cure, 1662

10. The Great Case of Liberty of Conscience, 1670

11. Essays to Do Good, 1710

12. Argument against Anglican Control of King's College (Columbia), 1753

13. Journal of the Carolina Backcountry, 1767-68

14. Recollections of Institution-Building, 1771-84

II. The American Revolution: Sources of the Nonprofit Sector

Three. To the Constitution: Limited Government and Disestablishment

15. Cato's Letters: Arguments against a Strong Central Government, 1720

16. Argument against Taxes for Religious Purposes in Massachusetts, 1774

17. Virginia Act Establishing Religious Freedom, 1786

18. The Federalist, No. 10, 1787

19. The Constitution of the United States, excerpts, 1789, and The First and Tenth Amendments, 1791

Four. Voluntarism under the Constitution

20. Autobiographical Statement on the 1818 Disestablishment of the "Standing Order" in Connecticut, 1864

21. The Dartmouth College Case, 1818 and 1819

22. Political Associations in the United States, 1835, and Of the Use Which Americans Make of Public Associations in Civil Society, 1840

III. Uses of Nonprofit Organizations

Five. Varieties of Religious Nonprofits

23. Organized Activity among Slaves, 1849 and 1839

24. The Voluntary Principle in American Christianity, 1844

25. Institutions, Autonomy, and National Networks, 1982

26. Social Catholicism, 1975

27. The Jewish Tradition of Community, 1970

Six. Nonprofit Organizations as Alternative Power Structures

28. Women Together: Organizations in Antebellum Petersburg, Virginia, 1984

29. Parallel Power Structures: Women and the Voluntary Sphere, 1990

30. Cooperation among Negro Americans, 1907

IV. Nonprofit Structures for the Twentieth Century

Seven. Science, Professionalism, Foundations, Federations

31. Debate over Government Subsidies, 1908 and 1900

32. Business at the Bedside: Health Care in Brooklyn, 1890-1915, 1979

33. Address on the Tenth Anniversary of the Rockefeller Institute, 1911

34. Community Foundations: The Delicate Question of Purpose, 1989

35. Community Chest, 1957

36. The March of Dimes: Origins and Prospects, 1957

Eight. Federal Regulation and Federal Funds

37. Pierce v. Society of the Sisters, 1925

38. Debate over a Nonprofit Organization in Mississippi, 1967

39. The Filer Commission, The Third Sector, 1974

40. The Political Economy of Nonprofit Revenues, 1993

41. Rust v. Sullivan, 1991

Index


About the author










DAVID C. HAMMACK is Hiram C. Haydn Professor of History and Chair of the Committee on Educational Programs of the Mandel Center for Nonprofit Organizations at Case Western Reserve University. Previously he taught in the City University of New York and at Princeton University. Hammack has held a Guggenheim Fellowship and was a Resident Fellow at the Russell Sage Foundation. His research has also been supported by grants from the American Council of Learned Societies and the Aspen Institute Nonprofit Sector Research Fund. He is the author of Power and Society: Greater New York at the Turn of the Century and Social Science in the Making: Essays on the Russell Sage Foundation, 1907-1972, and editor with Dennis Young, of Nonprofit Organizations in Market Economy.


Summary

How did the United States come to rely so heavily on non-profits? How have Americans sought to control them? These questions suggest the complexity of the history of non-profits in the United States. This reader presents some of the documents in the development of the non-profit sector along with interpretations by scholars.

Product details

Authors David C. Hammack
Assisted by Edited with Introductions by David C Ham (Editor), David Hammack (Editor), David C. Hammack (Editor)
Publisher Indiana University Press
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 22.06.2000
 
EAN 9780253214102
ISBN 978-0-253-21410-2
No. of pages 504
Weight 712 g
Illustrations 1 index
Series Philanthropic Studies
Philanthropic and Nonprofit Studies
Philanthropic and Nonprofit St
Philanthropic Studies
Subjects Humanities, art, music > History > Cultural history
Non-fiction book > History > Miscellaneous
Social sciences, law, business > Business > Miscellaneous

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