Abstract: A striking upsurge is under way around the globe in organized voluntary activity and the creation of private, nonprofit or non governmental organizations. From the developed countries of North America, Europe and Asia to the developing societies of Africa, Latin America and the former Soviet bloc, people are forming associations, foundations and similar institutions to deliver human services, pro mote grass-roots economic development, prevent environmental degradation, protect civil rights and pursue a thousand other objec tives formerly unattended or left to the state. The scope and scale of this phenomenon are immense. Indeed, we are in the midst of a global associational revolution that may prove to be as significant to the latter twentieth century as the rise of the nation state was to the latter nineteenth. The upshot is a global third sector: a massive array of self-governing private organizations, not dedicated to distributing profits to shareholders or directors, pursuing public purposes outside the formal apparatus of the state. The proliferation of these groups may be permanently altering the relationship between states and citizens, with an impact extending far beyond the material services they provide. Virtually all of America's major social move ments, for example, whether civil rights, environmental, consumer, women's or conservative, have had their roots in the nonprofit sector.
Publication Year: 1994
Publication Date: 1994-01-01
Language: en
Type: article
Indexed In: ['crossref']
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Cited By Count: 512
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