Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
10. Private Provision with Public Funding: The Challenges of Regulating Quasi Markets in Chilean Education
-
Alejandra Mizala
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgments vii
- Introduction 1
- 1. Mapping Social Welfare Regimes beyond the OECD 17
- 2. The Political Consequences of Non-state Social Welfare: An Analytical Framework 31
-
Part I States, Non-state Social Welfare, and Citizens in the Developing World
- 3. Empowering Local Communities and Enervating the State? Foreign Oil Companies as Public Goods Providers in Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan 57
- 4. The Politics of “Contracting Out” to the Private Sector: Water and Sanitation in Argentina 77
- 5. Blurring the Boundaries: NGOs, the State, and Service Provision in Kenya 99
- 6. Bridging the Local and the Global: Faith-Based Organizations as Non-state Providers in Tanzania 119
- 7. Sectarian Politics and Social Welfare: Non-state Provision in Lebanon 137
- 8. The Reciprocity of Family, Friends, and Neighbors in Rural Ghana and Côte d’Ivoire 157
- 9. The Naya Netas : Informal Mediators of Government Services in Rural North India 175
-
Part II The Politics of Non-state Social Welfare in Emerging Markets and the Industrialized World
- 10. Private Provision with Public Funding: The Challenges of Regulating Quasi Markets in Chilean Education 195
- 11. “Spontaneous Privatization” and Its Political Consequences in Russia’s Postcommunist Health Sector 217
- 12. State Dollars, Non-state Provision: Local Nonprofi t Welfare Provision in the United States 237
- Conclusion 257
- References 275
- Contributors 309
- Index 311
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgments vii
- Introduction 1
- 1. Mapping Social Welfare Regimes beyond the OECD 17
- 2. The Political Consequences of Non-state Social Welfare: An Analytical Framework 31
-
Part I States, Non-state Social Welfare, and Citizens in the Developing World
- 3. Empowering Local Communities and Enervating the State? Foreign Oil Companies as Public Goods Providers in Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan 57
- 4. The Politics of “Contracting Out” to the Private Sector: Water and Sanitation in Argentina 77
- 5. Blurring the Boundaries: NGOs, the State, and Service Provision in Kenya 99
- 6. Bridging the Local and the Global: Faith-Based Organizations as Non-state Providers in Tanzania 119
- 7. Sectarian Politics and Social Welfare: Non-state Provision in Lebanon 137
- 8. The Reciprocity of Family, Friends, and Neighbors in Rural Ghana and Côte d’Ivoire 157
- 9. The Naya Netas : Informal Mediators of Government Services in Rural North India 175
-
Part II The Politics of Non-state Social Welfare in Emerging Markets and the Industrialized World
- 10. Private Provision with Public Funding: The Challenges of Regulating Quasi Markets in Chilean Education 195
- 11. “Spontaneous Privatization” and Its Political Consequences in Russia’s Postcommunist Health Sector 217
- 12. State Dollars, Non-state Provision: Local Nonprofi t Welfare Provision in the United States 237
- Conclusion 257
- References 275
- Contributors 309
- Index 311