This issue reflects a cosmos of the policy landscape of the global nonprofit sector today. The five papers span the globe from the U.S. to Africa to Australia and examine cutting edge developments including global nonprofit chains, charity law reform and new forms of social purpose organizations. In the lead paper, Ronelle Burger, Trudy Owens and Aseem Prakash examine how donor countries provide aid to developing countries through international nonprofits which then contract with nonprofits at the national level which in turn subcontract to local nonprofits. The question is then how well donor intent to serve the ultimate beneficiaries is actually achieved in this chain structure. The authors employ transactions cost theory to conclude that the chain structure can be problematic because of the difficulty of holding nonprofits in the chain accountable without constraining their flexibility to respond to local conditions. Three cases of aid to Ugandan nonprofits illustrate their arguments.
The second paper, by Beth Gazley, Yuan Cheng and Chantalle Lafontant, takes a systematic look at charitable support of U.S. national and state parks, employing the theoretical perspective of co-production and a unique historical dataset. The authors find that charities are involved in parks in a variety of ways that respond to various aspects of government failure, and that reliance on private philanthropy is a lasting feature of public park provision.
The third paper, by Ian Murray, studies the reform of charity regulation in Australia in the context of charity regulation in other federated countries such as the U.S., Canada and the UK. The paper analyzes the historical and political reasons for the reforms, the implementation challenges they face in Australia’s federal system of government, as well as the potential for expanding the charity commissioner’s responsibilities to include regulation of the broader nonprofit sector outside of charities per se.
Continuing on the theme of regulation, the fourth paper, by Anthony DeMattee, develops a broad overview of the types of regulatory regimes that govern civil society organizations at the national level worldwide, discovering four ideal types reflecting the (more or less liberal) governmental regimes in which they are embedded. The author applies this taxonomy to Kenya to illuminate how its regulatory regime has evolved incrementally over time.
The fifth paper, by Stefan Toepler, examines the “benefit corporation”, a new type of legal form in the U.S. that allows firms to combine profitmaking with a social mission. Toepler notes that this development has created considerable apprehension among traditional nonprofit leaders who perceive the new form as a competitive threat. Based on a study in the state of Maryland, Toepler finds little grounds for such concern, but rather that the new form tends to be more of an option for for-profit firms to differentiate themselves from their own competitors in the business sector.
We round out this issue with a book review by Mohamed Mohamed, of an important new book, Islamic Education in the United States and the Evolution of Muslim Nonprofit Institutions, written by Sabith Khan and Shariq Siddiqui. The book is significant for dispelling myths about Islamic education and philanthropy, and examining their place in the U.S. nonprofit sector alongside other religiously based nonprofit sector institutions.
I hope you enjoy reading this issue. Thank you for your interest in Nonprofit Policy Forum. As this is the final issue in volume 9, I wish to thank all of our reviewers over the past year whose work is critical to maintaining the high quality of our published papers. These reviewers, an all-star roster of nonprofit sector scholars and leaders, are listed below. Thanks as well to our managing editor Linda Serra who seeks out our reviewers and holds them to task, and to our colleagues at DeGruyter Publishing, Scott Whitener, Alex Goerlt and Bendix Dueker who help us solve the practical problems of processing manuscripts and pushing through each issue to production. Finally, I would like to express my appreciation to our editorial board members and to our financial sponsors (all listed in the front matter of the journal) for their ongoing help and support throughout the year.
Dennis R. Young, editor
Our reviewers:
Sal Alaimo, Susan Appe, Ann Armstrong, Putnam Barber,Emily Barman, Jo Barraket, Andrea Bassi, Elizabeth Boris, Dana Brakman-Reiser, Christof Brandtner, Oonagh Breen, Cass Brewer, Eleanor Brilliant, Evelyn Brody, Jeffrey Brudney, Brenda Bushouse, Thad Calabrese, Julia Carboni, Curtis Child, Ram Cnnan, Kate Cooney, Joe Cordes, Gemma Donnelly-Cox, Angela Eikenberry, Philippe Eynaud, Lewis Faulk, Rob Fischer, Julie Fisher, Rachel Fyall, Joe Galaskiewicz, Ben Gidron, Mary Kay Gugerty, Chao Guo, Mark Hager, David Hammack, Katie Herrold, Chien-chung Huang, Patricia Hughes, Johan Hvenmark, Renee Irvin, Kevin Kearns, Janelle Kerlin, Mirae Kim, Jack Krauskopf, Jesse Lecy, Leslie Lenkowsky, Yang Li, Roger Lohmann, Myles McGregor-Lowndes, Deborah Mesch, Michael Meyer, Carl Milofsky, George Mitchell, Laurie Mook, Jennifer Mosley. Brent Never, Jill Nicholson-Crotty, Marthe Nyssens, Jenny Onyx, Laurie Paarlberg, Susan Phillips, Simone Poledrini, Aseem Prakash, Jon Pratt, Jack Quarter, Dave Renz, Marte Reuter, Patrick Rooney, Alicia Schatteman, Georg von Schnurbein, Bruce Seaman, Elizabeth Searing, Shawn Shieh, Dave Sjoquist, Margaret Sloan, Roger Spear, Rich Steinberg, Melissa Stone, David Suarez, Simon Teasdale, Jeremy Thornton, Dan Tinkelman, Stefan Toepler, Ichiro Tsukamoto, Vladislav Valentinov, Isabel Vidal, Johann von Essen, Lilya Wagner, Janet Walton, Qun Wang, Filip Wijkstrom, Amanda Wilsker and Barry Young
© 2019 Young, published by De Gruyter
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Public License.
Articles in the same Issue
- Editorial
- Editor’s Note for Issue 9(4)
- Articles
- Global Non-Profit Chains and the Challenges of Development Aid Contracting
- Charitable Support for U.S. National and State Parks Through the Lens of Coproduction and Government Failure Theories
- Regulating Charity in a Federated State: The Australian Perspective
- Toward a Coherent Framework: A Typology and Conceptualization of CSO Regulatory Regimes
- Do Benefit Corporations Represent a Policy Threat to Nonprofits?
- Book Review
- Khan, Sabith Siddiqui, Shariq: Islamic Education in the United States and the Evolution of Muslim Nonprofit Institutions: New Horizons in Nonprofit Research
Articles in the same Issue
- Editorial
- Editor’s Note for Issue 9(4)
- Articles
- Global Non-Profit Chains and the Challenges of Development Aid Contracting
- Charitable Support for U.S. National and State Parks Through the Lens of Coproduction and Government Failure Theories
- Regulating Charity in a Federated State: The Australian Perspective
- Toward a Coherent Framework: A Typology and Conceptualization of CSO Regulatory Regimes
- Do Benefit Corporations Represent a Policy Threat to Nonprofits?
- Book Review
- Khan, Sabith Siddiqui, Shariq: Islamic Education in the United States and the Evolution of Muslim Nonprofit Institutions: New Horizons in Nonprofit Research