Title
Regulatory Waves: Comparative Perspectives on State Regulation and SelfRegulation Policies in the Nonprofit Sector,Used
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All governments, in various ways, regulate and control nonprofit organizations. Nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), while hopeful of supportive regulatory environments, are simultaneously seeking greater autonomy both to provide services and to advocate for policy change. In part to counter increasing statutory regulation, there is a global nonprofit sector movement towards greater grassroots regulation what the authors call selfregulation through codes of conduct and selfaccreditation processes. This book drills down to the country level to study both sides of this equation, examining how state regulation and nonprofit selfregulation affect each other and investigating the causal nature of this interaction. Exploring these issues from historical, cultural, political, and environmental perspectives, and in sixteen jurisdictions (Australia, China, Brazil, Ecuador, England and Wales, Ethiopia, Ireland, Israel, Kenya, Malawi, Mexico, Tanzania, Uganda, Scotland, United States, and Vietnam), the authors analyze the interplay between state control and nonprofit selfregulation to better understand broader emerging trends.
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