Between Markets and Government: Essays on Nonprofitness and the Institutional Transformation of Child Welfare Agencies

abstract: In many respects, the current public child welfare system closely resembles that of over 100 years ago. Then, as well as now, nonprofit child welfare agencies are the critical providers of service delivery to vulnerable children and their families. Contemporary nonprofits, however, are con...

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Other Authors: Robichau, Robbie (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.18143
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-181432018-06-22T03:04:13Z Between Markets and Government: Essays on Nonprofitness and the Institutional Transformation of Child Welfare Agencies abstract: In many respects, the current public child welfare system closely resembles that of over 100 years ago. Then, as well as now, nonprofit child welfare agencies are the critical providers of service delivery to vulnerable children and their families. Contemporary nonprofits, however, are confronted with social and fiscal pressures to conform to normative practices and behaviors of governmental and for-profit organizations. Simultaneously, these agencies may also feel compelled to behave in accordance with a nonprofit normative ethic. Yet, scholars and practitioners are often unaware of how these different forces may be shaping the practices of child welfare agencies and, the nonprofit sector in general. This multi-paper dissertation examines how managerial and organizational practices of child welfare nonprofits are influenced business, government, and other nonprofit organizations and the extent to which processes process of institutional isomorphism in child welfare nonprofits are happening. Data was collected from a national ample of 184 child welfare administrators to explore marketization practices, collaboration behaviors, and managerial priorities of these agencies. Multinomial logistic, ordered logistic, and ordinary least squares regression, and historical analysis help shed light on the contemporary practices of these agencies. The results reveal that these agency's behaviors are shaped by government control, influences from the business community, identification with a nonprofit mindset (i.e., nonprofitness), funding streams, and various other factors. One key finding is that identification with a nonprofit mindset encourages certain behaviors like collaboration with other nonprofits and placing greater importance on key managerial priorities, but it does not reduce the likelihood of adopting business management strategies. Another important finding is that government control and funding does not have as strong as an influence on child welfare nonprofits as expected; however, influence from the business community does strongly affect many of their practices. The implications of these findings are discussed for child welfare agencies and the nonprofit sector in general. The consequences of nonprofits operating similarly to business and government are considered. Dissertation/Thesis Robichau, Robbie (Author) Catlaw, Thomas (Advisor) Nahavandi, Afsaneh (Committee member) Gustavsson, Nora (Committee member) Wang, Lili (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Public administration Administration Child Welfare Collaboration Management Marketization Nonprofit eng 255 pages Ph.D. Public Administration 2013 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.18143 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2013
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Public administration
Administration
Child Welfare
Collaboration
Management
Marketization
Nonprofit
spellingShingle Public administration
Administration
Child Welfare
Collaboration
Management
Marketization
Nonprofit
Between Markets and Government: Essays on Nonprofitness and the Institutional Transformation of Child Welfare Agencies
description abstract: In many respects, the current public child welfare system closely resembles that of over 100 years ago. Then, as well as now, nonprofit child welfare agencies are the critical providers of service delivery to vulnerable children and their families. Contemporary nonprofits, however, are confronted with social and fiscal pressures to conform to normative practices and behaviors of governmental and for-profit organizations. Simultaneously, these agencies may also feel compelled to behave in accordance with a nonprofit normative ethic. Yet, scholars and practitioners are often unaware of how these different forces may be shaping the practices of child welfare agencies and, the nonprofit sector in general. This multi-paper dissertation examines how managerial and organizational practices of child welfare nonprofits are influenced business, government, and other nonprofit organizations and the extent to which processes process of institutional isomorphism in child welfare nonprofits are happening. Data was collected from a national ample of 184 child welfare administrators to explore marketization practices, collaboration behaviors, and managerial priorities of these agencies. Multinomial logistic, ordered logistic, and ordinary least squares regression, and historical analysis help shed light on the contemporary practices of these agencies. The results reveal that these agency's behaviors are shaped by government control, influences from the business community, identification with a nonprofit mindset (i.e., nonprofitness), funding streams, and various other factors. One key finding is that identification with a nonprofit mindset encourages certain behaviors like collaboration with other nonprofits and placing greater importance on key managerial priorities, but it does not reduce the likelihood of adopting business management strategies. Another important finding is that government control and funding does not have as strong as an influence on child welfare nonprofits as expected; however, influence from the business community does strongly affect many of their practices. The implications of these findings are discussed for child welfare agencies and the nonprofit sector in general. The consequences of nonprofits operating similarly to business and government are considered. === Dissertation/Thesis === Ph.D. Public Administration 2013
author2 Robichau, Robbie (Author)
author_facet Robichau, Robbie (Author)
title Between Markets and Government: Essays on Nonprofitness and the Institutional Transformation of Child Welfare Agencies
title_short Between Markets and Government: Essays on Nonprofitness and the Institutional Transformation of Child Welfare Agencies
title_full Between Markets and Government: Essays on Nonprofitness and the Institutional Transformation of Child Welfare Agencies
title_fullStr Between Markets and Government: Essays on Nonprofitness and the Institutional Transformation of Child Welfare Agencies
title_full_unstemmed Between Markets and Government: Essays on Nonprofitness and the Institutional Transformation of Child Welfare Agencies
title_sort between markets and government: essays on nonprofitness and the institutional transformation of child welfare agencies
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.18143
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