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The volume discusses the current state of international comparative Third Sector research and potential avenues for future development of the field. Building on seminal work by Helmut Anheier and Lester Salamon, the volume provides necessary updates to ensure further Third Sector research is relevant and impactful due to the changing landscape of international relations and the way that the Third Sector interacts with the state, corporates, and wider civil society to face the new global challenges: environmental, economic and social.
The book is articulated in five sections that are organized to move from theory to definition and classification towards aggregation (measurement, counting), plus one section dedicated to the relationship between Third Sector and faith. The sixth and final section synthesizes the scientific conversation developed in the five previous ones and opens new research paths for the future.
Encompassing multi-disciplinary approaches and international points of view, the volume is directed towards graduate students and researchers across the academic spectrum as well as practitioners and policymakers working in the Third Sector.
This is an open access book.
This book is open access, which means that you have free and unlimited access Provides contemporary definitions of the structure and nature of the Third Sector to reflect its hybridity and diversity Encompasses multi-disciplinary approaches, including sociology, political science, economics, and management Opens new research avenues for the field
Auteur
Andrea Bassi is Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Bologna. He has a PhD in Sociology and Social Policy from the University of Bologna. His research interests include studies on nonprofit organizations in the field of social and health services, particularly concerning the relationships between public administration and nonprofit deliverers, and systems of measurement of organizational performance and social impact of nonprofit organizations. He has 15 years of experience as Manager of nonprofit institutions in Italy, associations, social cooperatives, voluntary organizations and foundations, both at the local and national level.
Mário Aquino Alves holds a PhD in Business Administration from the Getulio Vargas Foundation - SP. He has a law degree from the University of São Paulo. He concluded post-doctorate studies at HEC Montréal. He is a Fellow in Productivity in Research 1D of CNPq. He is a member of the Center Collegiate for Studies inPublic Administration and Government and the editor of the Public Citizenship and Management Agendas. Since 2015, he has been the coordinator of the master's and doctorate programs in Public Administration and Government at FGV EAESP. With a strong background in Organizational Studies, his research and master's degree and doctoral studies focus on the following topics: civil society, corporate social responsibility, and qualitative methods of research.
Carolyn Cordery is Chair of the New Zealand Accounting Standards Board. She is an Adjunct Professor at Victoria University of Wellington and also holds other honorary and visiting professor positions in the UK and Europe. Much of Carolyn's research is based on international comparisons of not-for-profit organizations' accounting, the impact of their resourcing, and the regulations that define their General Purpose Financial Reports and she is currently a member of the Practitioner Advisory Group of the IFR4NPO project (International Financial Reporting for Non-Profit Organizations). Carolyn also researches public sector audits as a means of accountability, has undertaken a number of commissioned research projects, published internationally, and is on the editorial board of a number of academic journals. Prior to joining academia, Carolyn held financial accounting roles in industry and, in the 1990s, was a member of the New Zealand Stock Exchange. Professionally, Carolyn is a Fellow of CPA Australia and Chartered Accountants Australia and New Zealand.
Contenu
.- The Third Sector research: the construction of a field of study.
.- Section I Theory.
.- Theory of the Third Sector.
.- Commentary on Theory of the Third Sector.
.- Section II - Definition.
.- Third Sector: the building of a research field.
.- The terminological debate.
.- In search of a positive, historical and experimentalist definition of civil society.
.- Defining civil society in the turbulent times lessons from Poland.
.- Defining Civil Society - Commentary.
.- Section III - Classification.
.- Part One: The Classification of Civil Society, Nonprofit and Third Sector Organizations.
.- Part Two: Turning a Critical Lens on Nonprofit Classification: Opportunities and Challenges in the Digital Age
.- CSO classification: a commentary from Latin America.
.- Section IV - Aggregation.
.- Data Aggregation: An Overview of Opportunities and Obstacles from the National to the Global.
.- Capturing Data on Volunteering in a Global Dimension: a Window of Opportunity for Furthering Third Sector Research.
.- Technologies for Data Aggregation: An Overview of Technologies and Opportunities to Propel Third Sector Research.
.- Commentary on Data Aggregation by Elizabeth Bloodgood, Ksenija Fonovi, and Francisco Santamarina.
.- Section V - Faith.
.- The Relationship between the Third Sector and Religion.
.- Analyzing civil society in the Arab world: a conceptual review.
.- Religion and faith-based organizations in Brazil's social policies.
.- Commentary on Section V Faith.
.- Section VI - Ways forward.
.- Third-Sector Research: Ubi eras, quo vadis?.
.- Commentary on Section VI - Third-Sector Research: Ubi eras, quo vadis?.
.- Future Challenges Facing Third Sector Research.