Neighborhood self-management : experiments in civil society
著者
書誌事項
Neighborhood self-management : experiments in civil society
(Nonprofit and civil society studies)
Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers, c2001
- : softcover
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注記
Publisher varies: Springer Science+Business Media
Includes bibliographical references (p. 149-160) and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Over the past two decades, Western countries have witnessed changes in the governance of local authorities. During that period, governmental authority and traditional governmental functions have gradually shifted to local authorities at the municipal level. In keeping with this trend, the governments have attempted to diminish their role in the provision of social, human, and communal services and encouraged nongovernmental organizations to penetrate the arena of services previously supplied by the government. In the community domain, neighborhood organizations that encourage citizen involvement and participation in policymaking and decisions concerning their life and well-being have gained increasing influence. In this regard, the emergence of the community council and its development as a unique entity in the municipal arena is particularly noteworthy. The community council reflects an advanced stage in the development of community and voluntary organizations that lacked the organizational and professional infrastructure, know-how, and technologies, as well as the competence to cope with the powerful governmental and municipal establish ment. The community council reflects the developed civic consciousness of the city's residents, who demand responses to their changing and heterogeneous needs. In this context, neighborhood residents have sought to establish a powerful and influential organization that serves them and represents their interests vis-a.-vis the municipal and governmental authorities.
目次
Preface. 1. Introduction. 2. Theoretical Framework. 3. The Neighborhood Self-Management Organization: Background, Vision, Ideology, and Organizational Domain. 4. Neighborhood Self-Management Organizations: An International Perspective. 5. The Community Council as a Merger of Two Neighborhood Organizations: Neighborhood Self-Management and Community Centers. 6. Ideological, Structural, and Organizational Dilemmas of Neighborhood Organizations in International Perspective. 7. Vision and Reality in the Community Council. References. Tables and Figures. Index.
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