台灣的非營利領域

This thesis sheds light on how the nonprofit sector developed in Taiwan, from under an authoritarian regime (1950s to 1980s) to the democracy today. It does so by asking two fundamental questions: First, why and how did Taiwan’s nonprofit sector emerge? Second, what are the forces that are shaping i...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: 寇慨文, Coll, Kevin Lee
Language:英文
Published: 國立政治大學
Subjects:
Online Access:http://thesis.lib.nccu.edu.tw/cgi-bin/cdrfb3/gsweb.cgi?o=dstdcdr&i=sid=%22G0094924023%22.
id ndltd-CHENGCHI-G0094924023
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-CHENGCHI-G00949240232013-01-07T19:34:13Z 台灣的非營利領域 The Nonprofit Sector in Taiwan 寇慨文 Coll, Kevin Lee 非營利領域 taiwan nonprofit social enterprise civil society This thesis sheds light on how the nonprofit sector developed in Taiwan, from under an authoritarian regime (1950s to 1980s) to the democracy today. It does so by asking two fundamental questions: First, why and how did Taiwan’s nonprofit sector emerge? Second, what are the forces that are shaping its development? In this study I advance four arguments. First, I argue that the nonprofit sector has passed through several distinct phases since democratization in the early 1980s. We will see that its transformation mirrors changing economic, social, and political developments in Taiwan. However, I also make three other related arguments about the nonprofit sector in Taiwan. My second argument is that the state and its institutions have profoundly shaped the nonprofit sector’s pattern of development. The state matters because political institutions and regulatory frameworks directly and indirectly structure the development of civil society, which is the organized non-state, non-market sphere in which nonprofits operate. To support this argument, I show how, in the 1980s and 1990s, the nonprofit sector was shaped by social movements, electoral competition, and privatization of social welfare. My third, or “third-party government,” argument—a concept first advanced by Lester Salamon—contends that, since the late 1990s, the nonprofit sector and state have become interdependent to make up for their corresponding institutional strengths and weaknesses. My fourth argument is that the current combination of economic downturn, social welfare devolution, and competition with for-profit enterprises has pushed nonprofits towards commercialization and marketization—a trend that offers significant benefits as well as pitfalls for the nonprofit sector. 國立政治大學 http://thesis.lib.nccu.edu.tw/cgi-bin/cdrfb3/gsweb.cgi?o=dstdcdr&i=sid=%22G0094924023%22. text 英文 Copyright © nccu library on behalf of the copyright holders
collection NDLTD
language 英文
sources NDLTD
topic 非營利領域
taiwan
nonprofit
social enterprise
civil society
spellingShingle 非營利領域
taiwan
nonprofit
social enterprise
civil society
寇慨文
Coll, Kevin Lee
台灣的非營利領域
description This thesis sheds light on how the nonprofit sector developed in Taiwan, from under an authoritarian regime (1950s to 1980s) to the democracy today. It does so by asking two fundamental questions: First, why and how did Taiwan’s nonprofit sector emerge? Second, what are the forces that are shaping its development? In this study I advance four arguments. First, I argue that the nonprofit sector has passed through several distinct phases since democratization in the early 1980s. We will see that its transformation mirrors changing economic, social, and political developments in Taiwan. However, I also make three other related arguments about the nonprofit sector in Taiwan. My second argument is that the state and its institutions have profoundly shaped the nonprofit sector’s pattern of development. The state matters because political institutions and regulatory frameworks directly and indirectly structure the development of civil society, which is the organized non-state, non-market sphere in which nonprofits operate. To support this argument, I show how, in the 1980s and 1990s, the nonprofit sector was shaped by social movements, electoral competition, and privatization of social welfare. My third, or “third-party government,” argument—a concept first advanced by Lester Salamon—contends that, since the late 1990s, the nonprofit sector and state have become interdependent to make up for their corresponding institutional strengths and weaknesses. My fourth argument is that the current combination of economic downturn, social welfare devolution, and competition with for-profit enterprises has pushed nonprofits towards commercialization and marketization—a trend that offers significant benefits as well as pitfalls for the nonprofit sector.
author 寇慨文
Coll, Kevin Lee
author_facet 寇慨文
Coll, Kevin Lee
author_sort 寇慨文
title 台灣的非營利領域
title_short 台灣的非營利領域
title_full 台灣的非營利領域
title_fullStr 台灣的非營利領域
title_full_unstemmed 台灣的非營利領域
title_sort 台灣的非營利領域
publisher 國立政治大學
url http://thesis.lib.nccu.edu.tw/cgi-bin/cdrfb3/gsweb.cgi?o=dstdcdr&i=sid=%22G0094924023%22.
work_keys_str_mv AT kòukǎiwén táiwāndefēiyínglìlǐngyù
AT collkevinlee táiwāndefēiyínglìlǐngyù
AT kòukǎiwén thenonprofitsectorintaiwan
AT collkevinlee thenonprofitsectorintaiwan
_version_ 1716466305570177024