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Accountability and nonprofit organizations: A historical perspective
44
Citations
15
References
1995
Year
Historical PerspectiveOrganizationsYears American NonprofitsPhilanthropyCommunity DevelopmentCivil SocietyCommunity OrganizingManagementBusinessReligious SystemsAccountabilityUniversal NonprofitsSocial SciencesNineteenth CenturySocial Responsibility
Abstract American nonprofit organizations first developed in the nineteenth century as the organizational instruments through which Americans put their First Amendment freedoms of religion and political belief into practice. For one hundred years American nonprofits were held accountable by relatively small, compact communities of people who shared religious or other highly defined beliefs and values. In the twentieth century, many nonprofit organizations have grown very large and have adopted a scientific, general‐service‐to‐the‐community ethos. The legal, institutional, and cultural ideas and practices through which traditional nonprofits were, and are still, held accountable no longer seem to work equally well for the larger, more universal nonprofits of the late twentieth century.
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