The welfare state's other crisis : explaining the new partnership between nonprofit organizations and the state in France
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The welfare state's other crisis : explaining the new partnership between nonprofit organizations and the state in France
(IU Center on Philanthropy series in governance / James R. Wood and Dwight F. Burlingame, editors)
Indiana University Press, c1998
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Prefectural University of Hiroshima Library and Academic Information Center
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [179]-190) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The practice of delegating roles in social service provision to nonprofit organizations, often referred to as privatization, is a striking feature of the evolution of Western welfare states in the past few decades. "The Welfare State's Other Crisis" proposes an explanation of that trend based on an examination of the case of France. While most observers of the international trend toward increasing delegation to nonprofit organizations have equated it with a conservative assault on the welfare state, Claire Ullman demonstrates that this was not the case in France. There, delegation to nonprofits was principally advocated by three intertwined groups of political elites motivated by the desire to increase the ability of the state to achieve progressive social goals, including enabling welfare programs to reach more of the disadvantaged. These elites sought to recruit nonprofit organizations as partners of the state not to roll back the state, but to bolster and extend its power.To support her argument, Ullman recounts the increasing involvement of non-profit organizations in the implementation of a variety of different welfare policies under the direction of France's socialist government in the 1980s.
She finds that every major poverty policy of this administration relied on nonprofits for its implementation, including a campaign against hunger and homelessness, a law implementing a national right to housing and major legislation creating a guaranteed minimum income. Ullman's study suggests that the western welfare state's new reliance on nonprofit organizations be re-evaluated in light of the French case.Policy makers throughout the west have realized that there are some tasks which public agencies seem unable to accomplish without the help of partners in society, and they have turned to nonprofit organizations for help. The new partnership does not necessarily diminish public responsibility for social welfare programs, but it does have important implications for the functioning of the welfare state and even for democracy.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments Introduction Chapter 1: Delegation to Nonprofit Organizations and the Crisis of State Capacity Chapter 2: The Failure of Existing Theory: A Literature Review Chapter 3: The Nonprofit Sector in France: Past and Present Chapter 4: Laying the Groundwork for Delegation: Three Programs for Reform Chapter 5: Political Struggles over NonprofitsO Roles: 1974-1981 Chapter 6: A Policy of Delegation and Inclusion: The New Socialist Government in Power Chapter 7: The New Power of Nonprofits: Poverty Policy Initiatives of the 1980s Chapter 8: Nonprofits to the Rescue? Appendix Notes Interviews References Index
by "Nielsen BookData"