10th Conf.inside copy.new.indd - Observatori del Tercer Sector

Transcrição

10th Conf.inside copy.new.indd - Observatori del Tercer Sector
P ro g ra m
A3
Tu e s d ay, Ju ly 1 0 , 2 0 1 2
SPECIAL SESSION:
The Role of Foundations and the Field of Philanthropy
Studies and Research
1:30 p.m. - 3:00 p.m.
Parallel Session
A1
A
Charles Keidan, Pears Foundation, United Kingdom
Bhekinkosi Moyo, TrustAFrica, Senegal
David Schwartz, Donor Partnership Division, International
Development Research Centre (IDRC), Canada
Room 2
PANEL: Civil Society and Competing Concepts:
European Varieties Of Academic, Public and
Political Discourses
The focus of this session is to build understanding between ISTR’s
membership and foundations interested in research. We hope
that foundation speakers can inform our membership about their
philosophies, motivations, agendas, interests, needs and dilemmas and
raise questions for researchers to consider.
CIVIL SOCIETY AND POLITICAL DISCOURSE IN THE UNITED
KINGDOM. Pete Alcock, University of Birmingham
Moderator/Discussant: Catherina Pharoah, Cass Business School,
City University London, UK
CIVIL SOCIETY AND VARIETIES OF ACADEMIC, PUBLIC AND
POLITICAL DISCOURSES IN CROATIA. Gojko Bezovan, University
of Zagreb
A4
CIVIL SOCIETY AS POLITICAL IDEA AND ACADEMIC CONCEPT: THE
CASE OF SWEDEN. Lars Trägårdh, Ersta Sköndal University
College
PANEL: Corporate Philanthropic Activity and
Economic Performance
CIVIL SOCIETY AND PUBLIC DISCOURSE IN POLAND. Marek
Rymsza, Institute of Applied Social Sciences, University of
Warsaw
WHY DO COMPANIES ENGAGE IN PHILANTHROPY? EVIDENCE FROM
GERMANY. Sarah Borgloh, Centre for European Economic
Research (ZEW)
Chair:
Paul Dekker, Netherlands Institute for Social Research |
SCP & Tilburg University
A2
Room 6
CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY, CORPORATE PHILANTHROPY,
AND ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE. Rene Bekkers, Vrije Universiteit
Amsterdam
WHY DO COMPANIES ENGAGE IN PHILANTHROPY? EVIDENCE FROM
THE NETHERLANDS. Theo Schuyt, VU University Amsterdam;
Dick de Gilder, VU University Amsterdam
Room 4
Social Economy and Public Policy
Chair:
Rene Bekkers, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
ANALYTICAL REPORT OF THREE YEARS OF THE PILOT-PROJECT OF
BASIC INCOME GUARANTEE IN BRAZIL. Bruna Augusto Pereira,
RECIVITAS; Marcus Vinicius Brancaglione, RECIVITAS
HOW CAN SOCIAL ENTERPRISES PURSUE SOCIAL INTEGRATION OF
MARGINALIZED PEOPLE IN DIFFICULT FISCAL TIMES? Sachiko
Nakagawa, Keio University
A5
Room 7
Ethics, Finance, and Nonprofit Governance
Leadership
INDEX OF EFFECTIVENESS AND EFFICIENCY OF PUBLIC POLICY.
Marcus Vinicius Brancaglione, RECIVITAS; Pedro Theodoro
dos Santos Neto, RECIVITAS
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE AND ETHICAL LEADERSHIP FROM
A MONASTIC PERSPECTIVE: A LITERATURE REVIEW. Ksenia
Keplinger, Johannes Kepler University of Linz; Birgit
Feldbauer-Durstmüller, Johannes Kepler University Linz,
Institute for Controlling and Consulting
EXTRA- AND INTRA-GOVERNMENTAL SOCIAL INNOVATION:
INSTRUMENTS OF SOCIAL-WELFARE PROVISION. Gordon Shockley,
Arizona State University; Peter Frank, Wingate University
Chair:
Krystyna Kietlinska, University of Lodz
THE ROLE OF THE CELLARER – WHAT CAN THE CORPORATE WORLD
LEARN FROM A BENEDICTINE ABBEY’S CFO? Martin RW Hiebl,
Johannes Kepler University Linz, Institute for Con; Birgit
Feldbauer-Durstmüller, Johannes Kepler University Linz,
Institute for Controlling and Consulting
THE COMPLEXITIES OF BOARD DYNAMICS OF NON PROFIT
ORGANISATIONS AND THE ENGAGEMENT OF FINANCIAL
MANAGEMENT. Adele Johns, University South Australia; Bruce
Gurd, University of South Australia
10
W E D N E S DAY , J U LY 7, 2010
A8
TOWARDS FUNDRAISING EXCELLENCE IN MUSEUMS - LINKING
GOVERNANCE WITH PERFORMANCE. Diana Betzler, ZHAW
Zürcher Hochschule für Angewandte Wissenschaften, School
of Management; Markus Gmuer, Verbandsmanagementinstitut
(VMI)
Promoting and Enabling Intra- and Intercultural
Dialogue
CIVIL SOCIETY DIVIDED OR UNITED? THE TUG-OF-WAR OVER
“NATIONAL EDUCATION” IN POST-1997 HONG KONG. Thomas Tse,
Chinese University of Hong Kong
Chair:
Maria Rosaline Nindita Radyati, Center for
Entrepreneurship, Cooperatives, and Third Sector
(CECT), Trisakti University
A4
EXPLORING THE LOGIC AND PRACTICE OF HOSTING DIALOGUE
IN LOCAL COMMUNITIES. Jodi Sandfort, Humphrey School
of Public Affairs University of Minnesota; Kathryn Quick,
Humphrey School of Public Affairs, University of Minnesota
Room F
CRISIS IN MUSLIM EDUCATION: THE ALMAJIRANCI SYSTEM IN
NORTHERN NIGERIA AND RESPONSE OF STATE AND CIVIL SOCIETY.
Sulaiman Khalid, Usmanu Danfodiyo University, Sokoto
Boundary-Issues in The Study Of Volunteering
COMPARING THE UNIQUE VALUE OF VOLUNTEERING TO PAID WORK:
AN EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS. Agnes Meinhard, Ryerson University;
Judith Metz, University of Applied Sciences Amsterdam; Niek
Hoogervorst, RSM Erasmus University; Eva Anne van Baren,
RSM Erasmus University; Lonneke Roza, RSM Erasmus
University & Erasmus Centre for Strategic Philanthropy
Chair:
Jacob M. Mati, University of the Witwatersrand
A9
TO BE A VOLUNTEER OR NOT TO BE A VOLUNTEER: AN
EXPLORATORY STUDY OF CONCEPTS AND FRAMEWORKS AND
DEFINITIONS OF VOLUNTEERING IN SOUTH AFRICA. Bev Russell,
Social Surveys Africa
Room B
Nonprofit-Government Relations in Latin
America: Voices from the Area
BETWEEN COOPERATION AND COOPTATION: ANALYSIS ON
BRAZILIAN GOVERNMENT’S CONVÊNIOS. Marcelo Marchesini,
SUNY Albany
HOW PROGRAM VOLUNTEERING AND ASSOCIATION ACTIVITY FIT
WITH OTHER LEISURE ACTIVITIES: NATIONAL SAMPLE SURVEY
EVIDENCE. David Horton Smith, Boston College; Christopher
J. Einolf, DePaul University
LA PARTICIPACIÓN DE LAS ORGANIZACIONES DE LA SOCIEDAD
CIVIL EN LA FORMACIÓN DE POLÍTICAS PÚBLICAS EN AMÉRICA
LATINA: REFERENTES TEÓRICOS Y EXPERIENCIAS RECIENTES.
Alberto Hernandez Baqueiro, Instituto Tecnologico de
Monterrey
Chair:
Felipe Portocarrero, Universidad del Pacifico\
A7
Room E
REGULATING DIVERSE CIVIL SOCIETY AND NONPROFIT
ORGANIZATIONS THE CASES OF ECUADOR AND COLOMBIA. Susan
Appe, University at Albany, SUNY
Room D
PANEL: Between Citizens and the State:
Mediation for Democracy
THE BRAZILIAN GOVERNMENT ORGANIZATIONS AND THEIR
RELATIONSHIP WITH THE STATE: A PROMISING OR INTERESTED
PARTNERSHIP? William dos Santos Melo, Getulio Vargas
Foundation; Jonathan Félix, Getulio Vargas Foundation;
Rodrigo Nippes, Getulio Vargas Foundation; Guilherme
Marques, Getulio Vargas Foundation
PARALLEL POWER IN RIO DE JANEIRO: ARMED ACTORS AND
MEDIATION BETWEEN CITIZENS AND THE STATE. Joanna Wheeler,
Institute of Development Studies
MEDIATION OR LEADERSHIP? THE POLITICS OF REPRESENTATION
IN THE TREATMENT ACTION CAMPAIGN (TAC)’S LOBBYING FOR
HEALTH POLICY REFORM IN SOUTH AFRICA. Laurence Piper,
University of the Western Cape
USING THE LEGAL FRAMEWORK TO ENCOURAGE PUBLIC AND
PRIVATE SUPPORT FOR NOT-FOR-PROFIT ORGANIZATIONS IN MEXICO.
Michael D. Layton, ITAM
THE POLITICS OF MEDIATION AND CITIZEN PARTICIPATION IN THE
GLOBAL SOUTH. Bettina von Lieres, University of Toronto
Chair:
Rosemary Leonard, University of Western Sydney
CONTINUING WITH THIS THEME OF MEDIATION IN POLICY ISSUES.
Deepta Chopra, University of Sussex
A10
Chair:
Laurence Piper, University of the Western Cape
Room C
External Linkages of NPOs
11
YOURS, MINE, AND OURS: OPTIMIZING THIRD SECTOR
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY THROUGH FRANCHISING. Elizabeth
Spencer, Bond University
T U E S DAY , J U LY 10, 2012
A13
L’ORGANISATION COMME VÉHICULE PRIVILÉGIÉ DE DÉVELOPPEMENT
DURABLE. L’EXAMPLE DES ONG DE COOPÉRATION INTERNATIONALE.
Olga Navarro-Flores, Universiti du Quebec Montreal
PANEL: How Shall We Go About Studying Active
Citizenship? – The Scandinavian Tradition in an
International Context
CONTRACTING BETWEEN FOR-PROFIT SUPPLIERS AND NONPROFIT
CLIENTS: HOW IS THE GAP BETWEEN EXPECTATIONS BRIDGED?
Bram Mahieu, Vrije Universiteit Brussel; Marc Jegers, Vrije
Universiteit Brussels
QUALITATIVE CHANGES MASKED BY STABLE RATES? TRENDS IN
DANISH VOLUNTEERING OVER THE LAST DECADE. Lars Skov
Henriksen, Aalborg University
Chair:
Qiushi Liu, Tsinghua University
A11
A PARADOX OF AFFLUENCE? VOLUNTEERING IN NORWAY, 19972009. Dag Wollebaek, University of Bergen
NEW FORMS OF CIVIC PARTICIPATION – ENHANCING OR COMPETING
WITH TRADITIONAL VOLUNTEERING IN SWEDISH CIVIL SOCIETY?
Johan von Essen, Ersta Sköndal Högskola / Uppsala University
Room 3A
PANEL: Charity Accounting, Reporting,
and Regulation: (1) Emergent Issues from
Jurisdictions with New Charity Regulators
Chair:
Lars Svedberg, Ersta Skondal University College
THE DISCLOSURE PANACEA? FROM ASB TO THE CHARITIES ACT
2009 – AN IRISH PERSPECTIVE ON CHARITY REPORTING. Oonagh
Breen, University College Dublin
A14
Charitable Giving
CHARITY WITHOUT POLITICS? EXAMINING THE LIMITS OF ‘POLITICS’
IN THE LAW OF CHARITY. Rebecca Lee, Faculty of Law, The
University of Hong Kong
DO ACCOUNTING REGULATORS LISTEN TO THEIR CHARITABLE
STAKEHOLDERS? Rowena Sinclair, Auckland University of
Technology
JUSTIFYING PUBLIC ADVOCACY BY CHARITIES: WHEN DOES
POLITICAL ACTIVITY BECOME CHARITABLE? Lusina Ho, Faculty
of Law, The University of Hong Kong; Joseph C.W. Chan,
University of Hong Kong
REPORTING OUTCOMES AND PUBLIC BENEFIT: ASSESSING THE
NEEDS OF FUNDERS AND COMMISSIONING AUTHORITIES IN FOUR
Tobias Jung, Cass Business School
THIRD SECTOR SOCIAL POLICY RESEARCH IN AUSTRALIA: NEW
ACTORS, NEW POLITICS? Ruth Phillips, University of Sydney;
Susan Goodwin, The University of Sydney
Chair:
Gareth G Morgan, Sheffield Hallam University
Discussant:
Carolyn Cordery, Victoria University of Wellington
A12
Room A1
“Money Makes the World Go Round”:
LIGHT-HANDED CHARITY REGULATION: ITS EFFECT ON REPORTING
PRACTICE IN NEW ZEALAND. Carolyn Cordery, Victoria
University of Wellington
JURISDICTIONS.
Room A
Chair:
Brenda Gainer, York University, Schulich School of
Business
Room 3B
PANEL: Social Partnerships in Europe:
Approaches and Research
A15
SOCIAL PARTNERSHIPS IN EUROPE: APPROACHES AND RESEARCH
(IRELAND). Fred W. Powell, National University of Ireland,
Cork
CIVIL SOCIETY AND THE STATE. Sema Akboga, Koç University
Room 15
Reexamining State-Civil Society Relations
MOUVEMENTS SOCIAUX: DES CONTRIBUTIONS ET LA REDÉFINITION
DE LA RELATION « SOCIÉTÉ CIVILE ÉTAT, DANS UNE VILLE
GLOBALE D’UN PAYS ÉMERGENT AU XXI ÈME SIÈCLE. Monique
Falcão, Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro - UERJ;
Ricardo Nery Falbo, Universidade do Estado do Rio de
Janeiro - UERJ
THE CHALLENGE OF SOCIAL PARTNERSHIPS IN THE SERVICES TO
THE PERSONS: THE ITALIAN CASE. Giovanna Rossi, Universita
Cattolica del S. Cuore
PROGRAMMATIC VS PROCESS OUTCOMES IN CROSS SECTOR SOCIAL
PARTNERSHIPS. EVIDENCE FROM THE UK CONTEXT. Maria May
Seitanidi, Hull University Business School
PUBLIC VALUES OF NONPROFIT ORGANIZATIONS: ARE THEY
EXTENSION OF PUBLIC VALUES PROMOTED BY GOVERNMENT?
Jeremy Plant, Penn State University; Triparna Vasavada, Penn
State University
Chair:
Lucia Boccacin, Universitat Cattolica del S. Cuore
12
Chair:
Per Selle, University of Bergen
T U E S DAY , J U LY 10, 2012
REVISITING RESOURCE MOBILIZATION THEORY (RMT) AND NEW
SOCIAL MOVEMENT (NSM) THEORY: A COMPARATIVE SCAN OF
PHILANTHROPY IN EGYPT AND LIBYA IN THE ARAB SPRING. Sherine
El Taraboulsi, John D. Gerhart Center for Philanthropy and
Civic Engagement
3:30 p.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Parallel Session
B1
B
PHILANTHROPIC FOUNDATIONS IN POST-REVOLUTION EGYPT:
IMPACTS ON DEMOCRATIC TRANSITION AND CONSOLIDATION.
Catherine Herrold, Duke University
Room 2
Social Enterprise and Social Entrepreneurship: An
Academic Perspective
EGYPT IN TRANSITION: A SCAN OF PHILANTHROPIC PRACTICES POST
JANUARY 25, 2011. Mahi Khallaf, CIVICUS
EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE ON THE EVOLUTION OF SOCIAL INNOVATION,
SOCIAL ENTERPRISE AND SOCIAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP IN SCIENTIFIC
LITERATURE. Claudia Brunner, University of Liechtenstein
TUNISIA IN TRANSITION: A SCAN OF PHILANTHROPIC PRACTICES IN
TUNISIA AFTER JANUARY 14. Monji Zidi, University of Tunis
SOCIAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP AS A CONTESTED INSTITUTIONAL FIELD:
UNDERSTANDING DIFFERENT MEANINGS ASSOCIATED WITH SOCIAL
ENTREPRENEURSHIP. Hanna Schneider, Vienna University
of Economics and Business; Florentine Maier, WU Vienna
University of Economics and Business
Chair:
Sherine El Taraboulsi, John D. Gerhart Center for
Philanthropy and Civic Engagement
SOCIAL ENTERPRISE: CHALLENGE OR OPPORTUNITY FOR
UNIVERSITY NONPROFIT MANAGEMENT PROGRAMS. Bronwen
Dalton, University of Technology, Sydney; Jenny M. Green,
University of Technology, Sydney; Melissa Edwards,
University of Technology, Sydney
B4
Determinants of Giving and Volunteering
FAMILY STRUCTURE, GENDER, AND GIVING AND VOLUNTEERING:
EVIDENCE FROM A LONGITUDINAL STUDY IN THE UNITED STATES.
Christopher J. Einolf, DePaul University
Chair:
Dennis R. Young, Andrew Young School of Policy
Studies, Georgia State University
B2
IS VOLUNTEER LABOR PART OF HOUSEHOLD PRODUCTION?
Evidence from Married Couples. Eleanor Brown, Pomona
College; Ye Zhang, Dept. of Economics, IUPUI
INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN HOURS DONATED TO NPOS: THE
ROLE OF VOLUNTEERS’ PERSONALITIES AND EXPECTATIONS. Tim
Vantilborgh, Vrije Universiteit Brussel; Jemima Bidee, Vrije
Universiteit Brussel; Roland Pepermans, Vrije Universiteit
Brussels; Jurgen Willems, (Vrije Universiteit Bruss; Gert
Huybrechts, Vrije Universiteit Brussel; Marc Jegers, Vrije
Universiteit Brussels
Room 4
New Perspectives on the Relationship Between
Donor and Recipient
BRINGING RECIPIENTS’ AGENCY BACK IN: PHILANTHROPIC
RELATIONSHIPS FROM THE PERSPECTIVE OF ISRAELI SOCIAL CHANGE
ACTIVISTS. Hagay Bar, Bar-Ilan University
OFF THE HOOK: HOW GEOGRAPHICAL MOVES AFFECT GIVING
AND VOLUNTEERING. Rebecca Nesbit, University of North
Carolina at Charlotte; Laurie Paarlberg, University of North
Carolina Wilmington; Robert Christensen, University of
Georgia; Richard Clerkin, North Carolina State University;
Mary Tschirhart, North Carolina State University; Darlene
Rodriguez, UNC-Greensboro
THE SOCIAL RELATIONS OF PHILANTHROPY: PATTERNS OF EXCHANGE
AMONG MAJOR DONORS AND RECIPIENTS IN AUSTRIA. Reinhard
Millner, WU Vienna University of Economics and Business
– Nonprofit Management Group
BEYOND MONEY: THE CHALLENGES OF FUNDING PLUS. Benjamin
Cairns, Institute of Voluntary Action (IVAR); Eliza Buckley,
Institute for Voluntary Action Research
Chair:
Steven Rathgeb Smith, University of Washington
ACCOUNTABILITY IN AUSTRALIAN PHILANTHROPY. Elizabeth
Cham, University of Technology Sydney
B5
Chair:
Lili Wang, Arizona State University
B3
Room 6
Room 7
Brazil: A Civil Society Innovations Laboratory
CITIZENSHIP, SOCIAL CONTROL AND DEMOCRATIC ACCOUNTABILITY:
THE ACTION OF TWENTY BRAZILIAN SOCIAL OBSERVATORIES.
Paula Chies Schommer, Federal University of Bahia
Room 5
PANEL: Philanthropy in Transition: A Scan of
Philanthropic Practices in Egypt, Libya and
Tunisia
SOCIAL ACCOUNTABILITY AS AN INNOVATIVE FRAME IN CIVIC
ACTION: THE CASE OF NOSSA SÃO PAULO. Danielle Fiabane,
Mário Aquino Alves, Fundação Getulio Vargas; Gabriela de
13
T U E S DAY , J U LY 10, 2012
Brelaz, Fundacao Getulio Vargas
Kim, School of Public Affairs and Administration, Rutgers
University
THE CONTRIBUTION OF THE BRAZILIAN THIRD SECTOR FOR
DEMOCRATIZATION OF PUBLIC POLICY. Luiz Carlos Merege, IATS
- Institute for Third Sector Management
IMPROVING TRANSPARENCY OF NPO’S FINANCIAL REPORTING - A
QUANTITATIVE STUDY (SWITZERLAND). Beatrice Meyer, ZHAW
Zürcher Hochschule für Angewandte Wissenschaften
Chair:
Bernard Enjolras, Institute for Social Research
B6
RESCUE THE COMPETITOR? – ACCEPTANCE OF NONPROFITS’
EXPENDITURES TO AVOID A NONPROFIT’S CLOSURE. Stefan
Ingerfurth, University of Mannheim, Nonprofit Mgmt.; Bernd
Helmig, University of Mannheim
Room F
The Twain Shall Meet? Civil Society and
Democracy
THE ORGANISATIONAL IMPACT OF EUROPEAN UNION FUNDING ON
THIRD SECTOR ORGANISATIONS. Hans Schlappa, University of
Hertfordshire Business School
TWO MODELS OF CIVIL SOCIETY AND DEMOCRACY. Pertti
Lappalainen, University of Jyväskylä
Chair:
Katalin Dobrai, University of Pécs
DEFINING LOCAL DEMOCRACY IN LITHUANIA: CITIZENS’ APPROACH
TOWARDS GOVERNMENT-NGO RELATION. Egle Vaidelyte,
Kaunas University of Technology; Egle Butkeviciene, Kaunas
University of Technology; Rasa Snapstiene, Kaunas University
of Technology
B9
NEW PARTICIPATORY APPROACHES TO LOCAL GOVERNMENT
BUDGETING: CASE STUDIES FROM EUROPE AND SOUTH EAST
ASIA. Rosario Laratta, Meiji University, Governance School;
Takafumi Kanemura, Meiji University
CRISIS CONTAINMENT IN ISRAEL’S NONPROFIT HUMAN SERVICES:
THE EFFECT OF MANAGERIAL COMPETENCY AND ORGANIZATIONAL
COMPETENCE. Rita S. Mano, University of Haifa
Danger of Crisis and Failure
DONOR CONDITIONS AND VOLUNTARY FAILURE AMONG SOUTH
AFRICAN NGOS. Dineo Seabe, University of Stellenbosch
Chair:
Per Selle, University of Bergen
B7
Room B
LEADERSHIP AND DECISION-MAKING IN CRISIS. Scott Campbell,
Caster Center for Nonprofit Research; Laura Deitrick, Center
for Applied Nonprofit Research
NONPROFIT ORGANIZATIONS AND SOCIAL CAPITAL IN COMMUNITY
DISASTER MANAGEMENT. Li-Wen Liu, Tunghai University
Room D
At the Eve of Hybridization
Chair:
IN PURSUIT OF LEGITIMACY: NONPROFIT ORGANIZATION’S
MOTIVATION FOR BUSINESS PARTNERSHIPS. Mary Runte,
University of Lethbridge; Debra Z Basil, University of
Lethbridge; Gail McKenzie, Lethbridge Youth Services
Lorraine Kerr, Flinders University
B10
Room C
NEGOTIATING FORMS FOR DIALOGUE AND EMERGING SOCIAL
ENTERPRISE MARKETS. Malin Gawell, Entrepreneurship and
Small Business Research Institute
PANEL: Social Enterprises Helping Marginalized Social
Groups: Four Diverse Cases From Toronto
MARKETS RUSH IN WHERE NETWORKS FEAR TO TREAD: CASE
STUDIES OF GOVERNANCE NETWORK AND THIRD SECTOR
ORGANIZATIONAL CHANGE IN NORTHERN IRELAND. Nicholas V.
Acheson, University of Ulster
MICROFINANCING PROGRAMS IN CANADA:THE CASE OF MIZIWE
BIIK. Mary K. Foster, Ryerson University; Ida E. Berger,
Ryerson University; Kenn Ross, Miziwe Biik; Kristine Neglia,
Ryerson University
Chair:
Silvia Ferreira, Lancaster University (UK) /
Universidade de Coimbra (Portugal)
STRUCTURAL AND STRATEGIC STRENGTHS AND LIMITATIONS OF
YOUTH-SERVING SOCIAL ENTERPRISES: A CANADIAN TRAININGRESTAURANT CASE STUDY. Raymond Dart, Trent University
B8
THE SOCIAL, PROFESSIONAL, AND PERSONAL IMPACT OF SOCIAL
ENTERPRISES ON IMMIGRANTS: THE CASE OF THE ACADEMY OF
COMPUTER & EMPLOYMENT SKILLS. Itay Greenspan, University
of Pennsylvania; Femida Handy, University of Pennsylvania;
Marlene Walk, University of Pennsylvania; Honey Crossley,
Working Skills Centre
Room E
Financial Aspects of NPO Operation
A LOOK AT THE GOVERNANCE FACTORS THAT INFLUENCE THE SIZE
OF NONPROFIT OPERATING RESERVES. Margaret Sloan, Morehead
State University; Cleopatra Grizzle, Rutgers University; Mirae
ENABLING WOMEN ON GOVERNMENT SUPPORT TO PARTICIPATE IN
MEANINGFUL ECONOMIC ACTIVITY: A CANADIAN CASE STUDY OF
14
T U E S DAY , J U LY 10, 2012
Chair:
Agnes Meinhard, Ryerson University
A SOCIAL ENTERPRISE.
Katia G. Melnik Olive, LEST University
Aix-Marseille 2, Center for Employ; Pauline O’Connor, Centre
for Voluntary Sector Studies, Ryerson University; Theresa
Morin, Sistering/Inspirations; Annie Lok, Centre for Voluntary
Sector Studies, Ryerson University
B13
PANEL: NGOs and Gender Integration: The Focus
on Gender in the Development Work
Chair:
Katia G. Melnik Olive, LEST University Aix-Marseille
2, Center for Employ
Discussant:
Ida E. Berger, Ryerson University
B11
Room A
“WE DON’T NEED ANOTHER HERO”: A CAUTIONARY TALE ON THE
DILEMMA OF ENGAGING WITH MEN IN ANTI-VIOLENCE AGAINST
WOMEN INITIATIVES IN AFGHANISTAN, EAST TIMOR AND PAKISTAN.
Joyce Wu, Australian National University
THE CHALLENGES OF MAINSTREAMING GENDER IN INTERNATIONAL
DEVELOPMENT WORK: SOME LESSONS FROM AUSTRALIAN NGOS.
Patrick Kilby, Australian National University; Joanne
Crawford, Australian National University
Room 3A
PANEL: Global Agenda Setting and Grassroots
Representation in NGOs and Social Movements
THE IMPACT OF WATERSHED DEVELOPMENT AND LOCAL
GOVERNANCE ON WOMEN’S EMPOWERMENT IN RURAL INDIA.
Jennifer Hughes, DePaul University; Ronald Fernandes,
DePaul University
NGOS, SOCIAL MOVEMENTS AND REPRESENTATION IN ECUADORIAN
WATER MANAGEMENT. Jaime Hoogesteger, Irrigation and
Water Engineering Group, Wageningen University and Centre
of Latin American Studies and Documentation, Amsterdam
WITHIN THE AFTERMATH OF CONFLICT: REPRESENTATION AND
CLAIM MAKING OF PERUVIAN VICTIMS. Mijke de Waardt, CEDLA
Chair:
Triparna Vasavada, Penn State University
POLITICAL CHANGE IN MYANMAR, DIVERSIFIED AGENDAS, AND
CONTESTED REPRESENTATION BY BURMESE NGOS. Maaike
Benders, VU University Amsterdam
B14
Third Sector Organizations Working
Internationally and in Transitional Countries
LEARNING HOW THINGS OPERATE: FUNDING FLOWS AND NGO
REFORMISM IN SOUTH AFRICAN CIVIL SOCIETY. Natascha
Mueller-Hirth, Compromise after Conflict, Department of
Sociology, University of Aberdeen
The INGO-Grassroot NGO Partnership in China: The Oxfam
Case. Min-Hsiu Chiang, Center for the Third Sector; ChengChung Wu, National Chengchi University
Chair:
Maaike Bender, VU University Amsterdam
B12
Room A1
What Facilitates Community Based Development in
Transitional Countries? Vasyl Kvartiuk, Leibniz Institute of
Agricultural Development in Central and Eastern Europe
(IAMO)
Room 3B
Global Climate Policy Coalitions – NGOs and Networks in
the Global Climate Change Policy Process. Ian McGregor,
University of Technology, Sydney
Civil Society and the Development Challenge
THEORIZING THE ROLES OF NGOS IN PEACE AND DEVELOPMENT:
LIBERAL MYTH OR ROUTE TO EMANCIPATION? Max O.
Stephenson, Jr., Virginia Tech; Laura Zanotti, Virginia Tech
New Social Pathways: Voluntary Associations for
Cooperation, Development and International Solidarity. Fabio
Berti, University of Siena; Lorenzo Nasi, University of Siena
”BIGGER THAN A PROGRAM”: THE ROLE OF NON-PROFIT
ORGANIZATIONS IN SUSTAINING, ADAPTING AND SPREADING
PROGRAMS. Janya McCalman, James Cook University;
Roxanne Bainbridge, James Cook University; Catherine
Brown, James Cook University; Komla Tsey, James Cook
University
Chair:
Mark Sidel, University of Wisconsin-Madison
B15
THE ROLE OF RURAL LOCAL ORGANISATIONS IN THE
SUSTAINABILITY OF WATERSHED DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMMES.
Devulacheruvu Venkatanarasappa Gopalappa, University of
Mysore
Room 15
Social Business: International Evidence
FLOURISHING SOCIAL BUSINESSES AND RENEWING THE NON-PROFIT
ORGANIZATIONS IN JAPAN. Nobuyoshi Ohmuro, Kyoto Sangyou
University
POWER AND COLLABORATIVE PLANNING : WANBAO SUSTAINABLE
COMMUNITY AND CIVIC ENVIRONMENTALISM OBSERVATION AND
REFLECTION. Chen-Yi Wu, Real Estate and Built Environment,
National Taipei University; Chen-Jai Lee, National Taipei
University
15
KEY SUCCESS FACTORS IN SOCIAL BUSINESSES: AN INTERNATIONAL
COMPARATIVE STUDY. Anita Maria Moura, University of Sao
Paulo; Graziella Maria Comini, FEA/USP - University of Sao
Paulo; Armindo dos Santos Teodosio, PUC/MG
W E D N E S DAY , J U LY 11, 2012
SOCIAL BUSINESS IN BRAZIL. Graziella Maria Comini, FEA/USP
- University of Sao Paulo; Rosa Maria Fischer, University of
Sao Paulo; Fernando Assad, University of Sao Paulo
CONSTANCY AND CHANGE IN THE WOMEN’S FUNDING NETWORK
Eleanor L. Brilliant, Rutgers University -- Emeritus
NONPROFIT ORGANIZATIONS & BUSINESS VENTURES: A MULTICASE
STUDY EXAMINING THE BALANCE BETWEEN SOCIAL MISSION
& BUSINESS GOALS. Yasanthi Perera, New Mexico State
University; Judith Weisinger, New Mexico State University
Chair:
Diana Leat, City University Business School
C3
Chair:
Michael Moody, Johnson Center for Philanthropy, Grand
Valley State University
PANEL: Charity and Social Redistribution:
Quantitative and Qualitative Perspectives
THE IDEA OF “CHARITY DESERTS”: EVIDENCE FROM QUANTITATIVE
AND QUALITATIVE RESEARCH IN ENGLAND. John Mohan,
Third Sector Research Centre; Rose Lindsey, University of
Southampton
We d n e s d ay, Ju ly 1 1 , 2 0 1 2
CHARITABLE GIVING, EVERYDAY MORALITY AND A CRITIQUE OF
BOURDIEUSIAN THEORY: AN INVESTIGATION INTO DISINTERESTED
JUDGEMENTS, MORAL CONCERNS AND REFLEXIVITY IN THE UK.
Balihar Sanghera, University of Kent
11:00 a. . - 12:30 p.m.
Parallel Session
C1
Room 5
C
THE EFFECT OF SOCIAL BACKGROUND ON THE DISTRIBUTION OF
CORPORATE DONATIONS. Matthew Bond, London South Bank
University
Room 2
THE ROLE OF NEED IN THE SELECTION OF CHARITABLE
BENEFICIARIES. Beth Breeze, University of Kent
Democratic Pipe Dreams? Civil Societies in
Nations in Transition
Chair:
Beth Breeze, University of Kent
CHALLENGES FOR CIVIC MISSION AT CROATIAN UNIVERSITIES:
ACADEMIC YOUTH IS NOT THAT INTERESTED? Bojana Culum,
University of Rijeka, Jasminka Ledic, University of Rijeka
C4
THE RUSSIAN THIRD SECTOR AND THE PROSPECTS OF
DEMOCRATIZATION. Lev Jakobson, National Research
University Higher School of Economics (Moscow)
Room 6
Governance Challenges: Varied Organisations,
Different Characters
THE WEAKNESS OF CIVIL SOCIETY IN UKRAINE: A MECHANISMBASED EXPLANATION. Kseniia Gatskova, Osteuropa-Institut
Regensburg; Maxim Gatskov, Bavarian Academic Center
for Central, Eastern and South Eastern Europe, Universität
Regensburg
CHALLENGES OF TRANSITION IN COMMON GOOD ORGANIZATIONS:
FROM ‘GOVERNANCE-BY-DOING’ TO STRATEGIC GOVERNANCE.
Ljiljana Erakovic, The University of Auckland Business
School; Judith McMorland, CO-LEARNZ
GOVERNANCE CHALLENGES IN FAIR TRADE ORGANISATIONS
(FTOS). Bob Doherty, Liverpool Hope University; Chris
Mason, Faculty of Business and Enterprise
DO PEOPLE IN NGOS PERFORM CIVIC BEHAVIOR? ORGANIZATIONAL
CITIZENSHIP BEHAVIOR IN POLISH NGOS –RESULTS OF AN EMPIRICAL
STUDY. Andrea Schmidt, Nonprofit Management Group,
Vienna University of Economics and Business
Chair:
Anthony Spires, Chinese University of Hong Kong
GOVERNANCE IN GRANT MAKING FOUNDATIONS. Steffen
Bethmann, University Basel; Georg von Schnurbein,
University of Basel; Sibylle Studer, CEPS - Centre for
Philanthropy Studies, University Basel
C2
Chair:
Jack Meyers, Rockefeller Archive Center
Room 4
Building Networks, Building on Networks
THE METAPHOR OF MICRO-LOANS: EXPANDING MOVEMENTS
OF CRITICAL CITIZENSHIP THROUGH TRAINING INITIATIVES TO
BUILD MICRO-NETWORKS OF KNOWLEDGE. David K. Truscello,
Community College of Baltimore County
16
W E D N E S DAY , J U LY 11, 2012
C5
Room 7
State-voluntary Sector Relations in Public Service Delivery
in the UK: The Case of Social Care for Older People. Jenny
Harlock, University of Bath
PANEL: Challenges and Opportunities for
Hosting International Volunteers: Perspectives
from Host Organizations in Developing Countries
SUCCESS FACTORS IN CREATING A NONPROFIT- GOVERNMENT SOCIAL
ENTERPRISE PARTNERSHIP - THE CASE OF YOUTHBUILD- ISRAEL.
Shlomit Shulov Barkan, School of Management, The College
for Academic Studies; Edna Bustin, YouthBuild, Israel; Haya
Ytzhaki, Bar Ilan Univesity
TRANSNATIONAL TENSIONS: REFLECTIONS ON THE CROSS-CULTURAL
CHALLENGES OF HOSTING INTERNATIONAL VOLUNTEERS. Rebecca
Tiessen, Royal Military College of Canada and Queen’s
University
THE CONVERGENCE PROCESS IN THE SOCIAL EUROPEAN UNION: A
CRITICAL REVIEW. Emma Juaneda Ayensa, University of La
Rioja
CULTURE SHOCK AS SEEN FROM THE SOUTHERN SIDE: PERSPECTIVES
AND EXPERIENCES OF CULTURE SHOCK FROM HOST ORGANIZATION
STAFF WORKING WITH SHORT-TERM NORTHERN INTERNATIONAL
VOLUNTEERS. Barbara Heron, York University
EMPLOYMENT OF OLDER WORKERS IN FRANCE: DO NONPROFIT AND
FOR-PROFIT ORGANIZATIONS DIFFER? Ekaterina Melnik, Centre
for Employment Studies; Mathieu Narcy, ERUDITE-University
Paris-Est Créteil and CEE, France
THE COLONIAL LEGACY OF INTERNATIONAL VOLUNTARY SERVICE.
Helene Perold, VOSESA
CAPACITY BUILDING CONTRIBUTIONS OF SHORT-TERM
INTERNATIONAL VOLUNTEERS. Benjamin Lough, Washington
University in St Louis
Chair:
Ed Carson, University of South Australia
Chair:
Rebecca Tiessen, Royal Military College of Canada and
Queen’s University
Discussant:
Rene Bekkers, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
C8
C6
HIGH RELIABILITY ORGANIZATION IN RISK MANAGEMENT: SOCIAL
RESPONSIBILITY AND PATIENT SAFETY IN A BRAZILIAN HOSPITAL.
Carlos Motta, Pontifical Catholic University of Parana
– Brazil; Victor Meyer Jr., Pontifical Catholic University of
Parana; Lucilaine Pascuci, Pontifical Catholic University of
Parana
Good Balance of Strategy and Operational Practice
A THEORY OF CHANGE FOR LEAD NON-PROFIT ORGANISATION
PRACTICE AS BOTH FUNDING BROKERS AND COLLABORATIVE
CAPACITY-BUILDERS. Wendy Earles, James Cook University
Room F
Reexamining Concepts and Theory
HOW CIVIC ARE REAL VOLUNTARY ASSOCIATIONS? A TEST OF
CURRENT ASSUMPTIONS IN CIVIL SOCIETY THEORY WITH DATA
OF ACTIVE ASSOCIATION MEMBERS AND VOLUNTEERS IN THE
NETHERLANDS. Erik van Ingen, Tilburg University; Paul
Dekker, Netherlands Institute for Social Research | SCP &
Tilburg University
OPERATIONALIZING A PROGRAM ADOPTION-BASED ORGANIZATIONAL
SUSTAINABILITY AND GROWTH STRATEGY: ACTUALIZING A HIGH
IMPACT ORGANIZATIONAL PRACTICE. Sid Frankel, University of
Manitoba; Harvy Frankel, Faculty of Social Work, University
of Manitoba
LOCATING THE CONCEPT OF “CIVILITY” WITHIN CIVIL SOCIETY
STUDIES AND PROPOSING AN EMPIRICAL RESEARCH AGENDA BASED
ON RELEVANT ITEMS FROM CROSS-NATIONAL SURVEY DATA SETS.
Anael Labigne, Hertie School of Governance
Chair:
Ferenc Farkas, University of Pécs
CROSS-NATIONAL MEMBERS OF PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATIONS:
EMPIRICAL DESCRIPTIONS AND EMERGING THEORY. Beth Gazley,
Indiana University; Matthew Baggetta, Indiana UniversityBloomington
C9
Room B
PANEL: A Comparative Understanding of the
Commercialisation of Nonprofits in the United
States and England
Chair:
Ronelle Burger, Nottingham University and
Stellenbosch University
C7
Room E
ARE CHARITIES IN ENGLAND AND WALES SUCCUMBING TO
MARKET FORCES? Stephen McKay, University of Birmingham;
Domenico Moro, University of Birmingham
Room D
“Times are Changing!” Nonprofits Adapting to
Changed Environments
MODELING THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN COMMERCIAL AND
DONATIVE REVENUE AMONG U.S. NONPROFITS. Simon Teasdale,
University of Birmingham; Janelle Kerlin, Georgia State
University
Towards an Understanding of Third Sector Modernisation.
Jeremy Kendall, University of Kent
CAN SOCIAL ENTERPRISES REMAIN SUSTAINABLE AND MISSIONFOCUSED? APPLYING RESILIENCY THEORY. Dennis R. Young,
17
W E D N E S DAY , J U LY 11, 2012
Andrew Young School of Policy Studies; Choony Kim, Georgia
State University
UNDERSTANDING CIVIC AWARENESS AND ACTION IN MALAWI
THROUGH A CIVIC DRIVEN CHANGE (CDC) LENS. Chiku
Malunga, CADECO
Session Organizer:
Simon Teasdale, University of Birmingham
Chair:
Pete Alcock, University of Birmingham
THE INDIGENOUS PARADIGM OF ‘VIVIR BIEN’ AND CIVIC DRIVEN
CHANGE. Daniela Sanchez Lopex, UNDP
C10
Room C
Chair:
Alan F. Fowler, Institute of Social Studies, Erasmus
University
PANEL: Making Sense of Performance
Measurement in the Nonprofit Sector
C13
EVALUATION LOGICS IN THE NONPROFIT SECTOR. Matthew Hall,
London School of Economics
PANEL: Panel on Welfare Innovations at the
Local Level: Intermediate Conclusions from the
WILCO Project
MEASURING MISSIONS: THE DISTRIBUTION OF DISCOURSE ON
EVALUATION FOR THE NONPROFIT SECTOR. Karina Kloos,
Stanford University; Achim Oberg, Mannheim University;
J. Carrie Oelberger, Stanford University; Walter W. Powell,
Stanford University
OF LOVE AND LUCRE: PERFORMANCE MEASUREMENT FOR
NONPROFITS AND SOCIAL ENTERPRISES. Emily Barman, Boston
University
Chair:
Emily Barman, Boston University
C11
Room 3A
Conceptualisation in Third Sector research
AFRICA, A CONCEPTUAL COLONY OR INDEPENDENT VOICE? :
TOWARDS THE DEVELOPMENT OF A CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK
OF CIVIL SOCIETY BETTER SUITED TO UNDERSTANDING SOCIAL
PARTICIPATION IN AFRICAN COUNTRIES. Bev Russell, Social
Surveys Africa
Room A
GERMANY. Annette Zimmer, Münster University
SWEDEN. Ola Segnestam Larsson, Ersta Skondal University
College; Marie Nordfeldt, Ersta Skondal University College
POLAND. Anna Domaradzka-Widla, University of Warsaw;
Renata Siemienska, Warsaw University
ITALY. Costanzo Ranci, Politecnico di Milano (POLIMI);
Giuliana Costa, Politecnico di Milano (POLIMI), Italy;
Stefania Sabatinelli, Politecnico di Milano (POLIMI), Italy
Chair:
Taco Brandsen, Radboud University Nijmegen
Discussant:
Steven Rathgeb Smith, University of Washington
C14
Room A1
PANEL: Aprendizajes, evidencia y acciones:
transformando las organizaciones de la sociedad
civil en el camino a una cultura de transparencia
y rendición de cuentas
GESTIÓN SOCIAL Y DIMENSIÓN POLÍTICA: UN DEBATE A SER
CONSTRUIDO EN LOS PROGRAMAS DE FORMACIÓN EN BRASIL.
Rosana de Freitas Boullosa, Federal University of Bahia
(UFBA)/ Escola de Admi; Edgilson Tavares de Araújo,
Pontifícia Unversidade Católica de São Paulo
LA AUTORREGULACIÓN COMO MECANISMO DE RENDICIÓN DE
CUENTAS DE LA SOCIEDAD CIVIL: EXPERIENCIAS Y ENSEÑANZAS
DE SEIS PAÍSES DE AMÉRICA LATINA. Anabel Cruz, Instituto de
Comunicacion y Desarrollo (ICD)
THE MEANING OF THE NONPROFIT SECTOR: INSIGHTS FROM
CLASSICAL INSTITUTIONALISM. Vladislav Valentinov, Liebniz
Institute of Agricultural Development in Central and Eastern
Europe
SITUACIÓN DE LA TRANSPARENCIA Y RENDICIÓN DE CUENTAS EN LAS
ORGANIZACIONES NO GUBERNAMENTALES (ONG) DEL ECUADOR.
Daniel Barragán, Centro Ecuatoriano de Derecho Ambiental
(CEDA)
Chair:
Chris Cornforth, Open University
UNA ÚNICA META: DIVERSOS CAMINOS. APRENDIZAJES DE LA
IMPLEMENTACIÓN DE ESTÁNDARES DE TRANSPARENCIA Y RENDICIÓN
DE CUENTAS EN ORGANIZACIONES SIN FINES DE LUCRO EN CHILE.
Analia Bettoni, ICD / National Association of NGOs
C12
Room 3B
PANEL: Applications of Civic Driven Change
APPLYING THE CDC LENSES TO LOOK AT ACORD – A
PRACTITIONER’S REFLECTION. Ousainou Ngum, ACORD – The
Agency for Co-operation & Research in Development
POLÍTICAS DE TRANSPARENCIA EN MÉXICO: NUEVOS RETOS PARA
LAS ORGANIZACIONES NO LUCRATIVAS. Jacqueline Butcher de
Rivas, CIESC, A.C.; Lorena Cortes, Centro Mexicano para la
Filantropia; Lourdes Sanz
Chair:
Daniel Barragán, Centro Ecuatoriano de Derecho
Ambiental (CEDA)
18
W E D N E S DAY , J U LY 11, 2012
C15
D2
Room 15
PANEL: Gestión Social como un paradigma
emergente en la América Latina y posibilidad de
expandir la Esfera Pública
Measuring Social Impact
ILLUMINATING THE BLIND SPOTS OF SROI IN CAPTURING SOCIETAL
FUNCTIONS OF NONPROFIT ORGANIZATIONS. Reinhard Millner,
WU Vienna University of Economics and Business – Nonprofit
Management Group; Florentine Maier, WU Vienna University
of Economics and Business; Ruth Simsa, Vienna University of
Economics and Business Administration
BUILDING UP A NEW PARADIGM FOR SOCIAL MANAGEMENT:
INTEGRATIVE METHODOLOGIES AS TOOLS FOR TRANSFORMATIVE
ACTION AND EDUCATION. Valéria Giannella Alves, Federal
University of Ceará - Campus Cariri; Vivina Machado, Via
Vida - Organizational Development
MEASURING SOCIAL IMPACT. Jenny Onyx, University of
Technology, Sydney; Melissa Edwards, University of
Technology, Sydney; Hazel Maxwell, UTS; Paul Bullen,
Management Alternatives Pry Ltd; Simon Darcy, UTS; Shauna
Sherker, SLSA
SOCIAL MANAGEMENT AND COPRODUCTION OF PUBLIC GOOD:
CONCEPTUAL AND METHODOLOGICAL CHALLENGES IN EDUCATIONAL
EXPERIENCES IN BRAZIL. Paula Chies Schommer, UDESC
- ESAG; Rosana de Freitas Boullosa, Federal University of
Bahia (UFBA)/ Escola de admi
MEASURING SOCIAL IMPACT IN A POST-GDP SOCIETY. Mary Lee
Rhodes, Trinity College Dublin
GESTIÓN SOCIAL EN LO TERCER SECTOR: AMBIGÜEDADES,
AMBIVALENCIAS Y RETOS PARA INNOVAR EN LAS PRÁCTICAS.
Edgilson Tavares de Araujo, Pontifical Catholic University of
Sao Paulo / Catholic University Portuguese - Lisbon
Chair:
Lehn Benjamin, George Mason University
Chair:
Edgilson Tavares de Araujo, Pontifical Catholic
University of Sao Paulo / Catholic University Portuguese
– Lisbon
D3
D1
Room 5
Networks and Partnerships
COLLABORATIVE ENTREPRENEURIAL ACTIVITIES UNDERTAKEN BY
SOCIAL ENTERPRISES. Craig Furneaux, Australian Centre for
Philanthropy and Nonprofit Studies, Queensland University
of Technology; Jo Barraket, Queensland University of
Technology
2:00 p.m. - 3:30 p.m.
Parallel Session
Room 4
THEORIZING SOCIAL ENTREPRENEUR NETWORKS. Andrew Brady,
Anglia Ruskin University; Helen Haugh, Judge Business
School, University of Cambridge
D
THE THIRD SECTOR AND SOCIAL HOUSING IN ITALY: CASE STUDY OF
A PROFIT AND NON-PROFIT PUBLIC PRIVATE PARTNERSHIP. Adriano
Propersi, Catholic University of Milan; Giuseppe Mastrilli,
Politecnico di Milano, Dipartimento BEST; Selin GundesGressel
Room 2
PANEL: Charity Accounting, Reporting, and
Regulation: (2) Reporting of Non-Financial
Impact in Established Charity Regimes
Chair:
Isabel Vidal, Universidad de Barcelona
CONVERSION RATIOS, EFFICIENCY AND OBFUSCATION: A STUDY OF
THE IMPACT OF CHANGED CHARITY ACCOUNTING REQUIREMENTS
ON EXTERNAL STAKEHOLDERS. Ciaran Connolly, Author; Noel
Hyndman, Queens University Belfast
D4
Room 6
SPECIAL SESSION:
MANDATORY PUBLIC BENEFIT REPORTING AS A BASIS FOR CHARITY
ACCOUNTABILITY: FINDINGS FROM ENGLAND & WALES. Gareth G
Morgan, Sheffield Hallam University
American Foundations in Europe: Archival Insights
Arnd Bauerkamper
Freie Universität Berlin, Germany
SHINING LIGHT ON CHARITIES, OR LOOKING IN THE WRONG
PLACE? THE NEW REGULATION-BY-TRANSPARENCY IN CANADA’S
CHARITABLE SECTOR. Susan D. Phillips, Carleton University
Diana Leat
Rockefeller Archive Center, UK
Ludovic Tournes
Université Paris Ouest Nanterre La Défense, France
Chair:
Carolyn Cordery, Victoria University of Wellington
Discussant:
Gareth G Morgan, Sheffield Hallam University
European scholars have been exploring the archives of U.S.
foundations since shortly after the opening of the Rockefeller
Archive Center in 1975. They have studied the impact of American
philanthropy on the social sciences, public health, medicine, and
19
W E D N E S DAY , J U LY 11, 2012
international relations, among other fields. They have examined
the role of foundations in the inter-war years, during post-war
reconstruction and the Cold War. Their archivally-grounded work
is reshaping our understanding of U.S. foundation roles and of
foundation interactions with European institutions. This session will
bring together scholars from France, Germany and the UK to discuss
their work.
D7
PANEL: Change in Egypt and the Role of the
Academy
THE ROLE OF REFLECTION IN YOUTH CIVIC ENGAGEMENT. Amy
Rowe, The American University in Cairo
IDEAS IN ACTION: THE ‘ABSENT PRESENCE’ OF INTELLECTUALS IN
THE EGYPTIAN YOUTH REVOLUTION. Helen Mesard, University of
Virginia and the John D. Gerhart Center for Philanthropy and
Civic Engagement
Chair:
James Allen Smith, Rockefeller Archive Center, USA
D5
Room 7
YOUTH AND THE 25TH REVOLUTION IN EGYPT: AGENTS OF CHANGE
AND ITS MULTIPLE MEANINGS. Dina El- Sharnouby, The
American University in Cairo
Determinants of Foundation Development
FOUNDATION GRANTMAKING STRATEGY IN PRACTICE. Stefan
Lennart Einarsson, Stockholm School of Economics; Jasmine
McGinnis, Georgia State University and Georgia Institute of
Technology; Hanna Schneider, Vienna University of Economics
and Business
Chair:
Amy Rowe, The American University in Cairo
D8
DETERMINANTS FOR THE SIZE OF A FOUNDATION SECTOR. Martin
Blickenstorfer, Verbandsmanagement Institut (VMI),
University of Fribourg; Markus Gmuer, Verbandsmanagement
institut (VMI)
Room E
PANEL: Conditions Modulating Collective Action
Organizations’ Social Returns
COOPERATIVE ENVIRONMENTS FOR NONPROFITS. Alejandro Natal,
El Colegio Mexiquense; Carlos Martinez Carmona, El Colegio
Mexiquense
REGULATION AND FOUNDATIONS’ AUTONOMY: THE US PATTERN
TOWARD REFORM OF ITALIAN LEGAL FRAMEWORK. Raffaella
Rametta, LUISS Guido Carli University
COOPERATIVE LINKS BETWEEN STATE AND CIVIL ASSOCIATIONS IN
MEXICO. Gloria Guadarrama, El Colegio Mexiquense
PHILANTHROPIC FOUNDATIONS - BRINGING A NEW APPROACH TO
DEVELOPMENT? Rik Habraken, CIDIN, Radboud University
Nijmegen; Lau Schulpen, CIDIN, Radboud University
Nijmegen
SOCIALIZATION AND GOVERNANCE. REFLECTIONS FROM SOCIAL
RETURNS OF COMPLEX ASSOCIATIVE SYSTEMS. Matilda Luna,
Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM); Carlos
Chavez Becker, Consejo Mexicano de Ciencias Sociales
Chair:
David Hammack, Case Western Reserve University
D6
Room D
FACTORS FAVORING CSO’ POSITIVE SOCIAL RETURNS IN
MEXICO. Sara Gordon, Instituto de Investigaciones Sociales,
Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México
Room F
CSR and Philanthropy
Chair:
Sara Gordon, Instituto de Investigaciones Sociales,
Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México
CSR AND STAFF INVOLVEMENT: THE EVALUATION OF THE
PARTNERSHIP. Alessia Anzivino, SDA Bocconi; Giuliana
Baldassarre, SDA Bocconi
EMPLOYEES’ ENGAGEMENT IN CSR: THE CASE OF PAYROLL GIVING
IN AUSTRALIA. Debbie Haski-Leventhal, Macquarie Graduate
School of Management
D9
CORPORATE PHILANTHROPY: THE AGE OF INTEGRATION. Patrick
Rooney, Center on Philanthropy at Indiana University;
Melissa Brown, Melissa S. Brown & Associates, LLC; Michal
Kramarek, The Center on Philanthropy at Indiana University
QUALITY OF WORK IN FINNISH THIRD SECTOR. Petri Ruuskanen,
University of Jyväskylä Department of Social Sciences and
Philosophy; Kristiina Selander, University of Jyväskylä; Timo
Anttila, University of Jyväskylä
Chair:
Christopher J. Einolf, DePaul University
DOES THE MISSION OF THE ORGANIZATION MATTER FOR JOB
QUALITY OF LOW-SKILLED WORKERS? Olivier Brolis, Université
Catholique de Louvain-la-Neuve
Room B
Issues of Quality and Effectiveness
COST FUNCTION AND EFFICIENCY OF CHILD CARE CENTERS IN
KOREA. Tae-kyu Park, Yonsei University
HUMAN SERVICES MANAGERS’ MOST PRESSING CONCERNS AND
TRAINING NEEDS. Richard Hoefer, University of Texas Arlington
20
W E D N E S DAY , J U LY 11, 2012
Chair:
Rita S. Mano, University of Haifa
D10
INTER-ORGANIZATIONAL RELATIONSHIPS (IORS) BETWEEN
NONPROFIT HUMAN SERVICE ORGANIZATIONS: TOWARDS A
THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK AND RESEARCH AGENDA. Dorit BarNir, Hebrew University Jerusalem; Sarah Carnochan, Mack
Center of Nonprofit & Public Sector Management in the
Human Services; Michael Austin, University of California,
Berkeley
Room C
Social Economy, Theory of the Firm and Corporate
Behaviour
Chair:
Fred W. Powell, National University of Ireland, Cork
PARTICIPATED GOVERNANCE, CORPORATE AND LABOR LAW AND
THE COST OF RECIPROCATED EXPROPRIATION. Giulio Ecchia,
University of Bologna
D13
DETERMINANT FACTORS OF CORPORATE ENVIRONMENTAL
INFORMATION DISCLOSURE – AN EMPIRICAL STUDY OF LISTED
ELECTRONIC COMPANIES IN TAIWAN. Grace Li-Min Liao, China
University of Technology National Taipei University; MingShiun Chen, National Taipei University; Shih-Jung Hsu,
National Chengchi University
“CRISIS Y GÉNERO.POLÍTICAS SOCIALES Y ALIANZAS PÚBLICO
PRIVADAS.” M. E. Marcela Jimenez de la Jara, Ministerio de
Desarrollo social; Hernán Acuña, Ministry of Planning
THE COOPERATIVE FIRM: COORDINATION AND MOTIVATION. AN
ANALYSIS FROM THE ECONOMIC THEORY OF THE FIRM AND THE
SOCIAL ECONOMY. Pablo Nachar, Universidad de Zaragoza;
Carmen Marcuello Servas, Universidad de Zaragoza
ROLES OF INTERNATIONAL NGOS FOR GENDER SENSITIVE RELIEF
OPERATION: LESSONS FROM THE EAST JAPAN EARTHQUAKE/
TSUNAMI. Masako Tanaka, Bunkyo Gakuin University
Chair:
John C. Ronquillo, DePaul University
D11
Room A
Sustainable Gender Equality Agendas in the
Third Sector
Chair:
Chris Lange, Alice-Salomon-University for Applied
Sciences
Room 3A
D14
Debating Measurement in and of the Third Sector
Room A1
PANEL: Social Finance and Investment
MEASURING HORIZONTALITY: THE METHODOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENT
OF A NEW INSTRUMENT TO MEASURE BEHAVIORAL CHANGE IN
COMMUNITY PHILANTHROPY ORGANIZATIONS IN AFRICA. Susan
Wilkinson-Maposa, University of Cape Town
SOCIAL INVESTMENT: A CURE SEARCHING FOR A DISEASE OR AN
ESTABLISHED REMEDY? Fergus Lyon, Middlesex University;
Charles Jardine; Alex Murdock, London South Bank
University
TESTING THE VALIDITY OF EXPERT-ASSESSMENT BASED
MEASUREMENTS OF CIVIL SOCIETY. Yevgenya Jenny Paturyan,
American University of Armenia
THE INSTITUTIONALIZATION OF SOCIAL INVESTMENT: THE INTERPLAY
OF INVESTMENT LOGICS AND INVESTOR RATIONALITIES. Alex
Nicholls, University of Oxford
THIRD SECTOR MULTILEVEL ORGANIZATIONS AND SOCIAL CAPITAL:
INDICATION FROM A QUANTITATIVE RESEARCH IN ITALY. Lucia
Boccacin, Universitat Cattolica del S. Cuore
HOW SOCIAL IS SOCIAL INVESTMENT? LESSONS FROM
MICROFINANCE SOCIAL IMPACT STUDIES. Pal Vik, Salford
University
Chair:
Rajesh Tandon, Society for Participatory Research in
Asia (PRIA)
D12
ETHICAL FINANCE AND SOCIAL FINANCE IN SPAIN. Carmen Parra,
Universitat Abat Oliba CEU
Chair:
Alex Murdock, London South Bank University
Room 3B
Emerging Issues in the Management of Nonprofits
D15
GOOD GOVERNANCE. A MANAGEMENT LESSON DRAWN FROM
LORENZETTIS SIENA PAINTING “BUONGOVERNO.” Antonin Wagner,
New School
Room 15
PANEL: Structure, Role and Recent Evolution of
Third Sector in Various European Countries
PROFESSIONALISM AND THE THIRD SECTOR. Joanne Blake, Cardiff
University
RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN THE LAW OF THE THIRD SECTOR IN THE
GERMAN-SPEAKING JURISDICTIONS (GERMANY, SWITZERLAND,
AUSTRIA AND THE LIECHTENSTEIN). Francesco A. Schurr, Chair
of Company, Foundation and Trust Law
LIFE CONCEPTS OF BUSINESS AND SOCIAL WORK STUDENTS
– INFLUENCING FACTOR FOR SECTOR CHOICE? Marlene Walk,
University of Pennsylvania
21
W E D N E S DAY , J U LY 11, 2012
STRUCTURE, ROLE AND RECENT EVOLUTION OF THIRD SECTOR IN
ITALY. Chiara Prele
RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN THE LAW OF THE THIRD SECTOR IN
SPAIN. Isabel Peñalosa, Spanish Foundations Association
PARTICIPATION OF THE BENEFICIARY IN NON-GOVERNMENTAL
DEVELOPMENT ORGANIZATIONS:A CASE STUDY IN VIETNAM. Fleur
Mercelis, Vrije Universiteit Brussels; Lore Wellens, Vrije
Universiteit Brussels; Marc Jegers, Vrije Universiteit Brussels
Chair:
Chiara Prele
THE INVOLVEMENT OF BENEFICIARIES IN THE GOVERNANCE OF
BELGIAN NONPROFIT ORGANIZATIONS: Lore Wellens, Vrije
Universiteit Brussels; Marc Jegers, Vrije Universiteit Brussels
Chair:
Pau Vidal, Observatori del Tercer Sector (OTS)
4:00 p.m. - 5:30 p.m.
Parallel Session
E1
E
E4
PANEL: Community Philanthropy and the “Arab
Spring” in Egypt
Room 2
Social investments
EGYPT’S COMMUNITY FOUNDATIONS IN PERSPECTIVE: VANGUARDS
OF DEMOCRATIC TRANSITION AND CONSOLIDATION? Catherine
Herrold, Duke University
SOCIAL INVESTMENT: A CONCEPTUAL OUTLINE. Volker Then,
Universitat Heidelberg; Konstantin Kehl, Heidelberg
University
FROM MAADI TO TAHRIR SQUARE: WAQFEYAT AL MAADI
COMMUNITY FOUNDATION WALKED THE ROAD FOR EGYPT’S
LIBERTY, DEVELOPMENT AND SOCIAL JUSTICE. Marwa A. El Daly,
Maadi Community Foundation - Waqfeyat al Maadi al Ahleya
WHAT SHOULD SOCIAL INVESTORS INVEST IN, AND WITH WHOM?
Richard Steinberg, IUPUI
VALUING SOCIAL RETURNS ON SOCIAL INVESTMENTS: COMPARING
THE STATE-OF-THE-ART IN THE US AND EUROPE. Michael
Moody, Johnson Center for Philanthropy, Grand Valley State
University; Laura Littlepage, Indiana University
BEDOUIN VOICE IN THE ‘NEW EGYPT’: PARTICIPATION AND
REPRESENTATION IN SOUTH SINAI - A CASE STUDY. Hilary Gilbert,
University of Nottingham
Chair:
Eleanor Woodward Sacks
Chair:
Rosa Maria Fischer, University of Sao Paulo
E2
E5
Room 4
Room 7
PANEL: Methodologies for Valuing Volunteering—
How to Understand the Impact
of Volunteering
PANEL: Robust Understanding Of Philanthropy
Using Micro Data: Bilateral Comparison of
Prosociality in Japan and Korea
VALUING VOLUNTEERING: USING SYSTEMIC ACTION RESEARCH
TO ASSESS THE IMPACT OF VOLUNTEERING. Violeta Vajda, VSO
International; Kate Cotton, VSO International; Joanna
Wheeler, Institute of Development Studies
GIVING AND VOLUNTEERING BY CITIZENS FROM 2003 TO 2009 IN
KOREA: PHILANTHROPIC CULTURE AND SOCIETAL TASKS. Chulhee
Kang, Yonsei University
WHERE ARE POTENTIAL DONORS AND VOLUNTEER?: EXPLORING
PREFERENCES AND INCENTIVES IN JAPANESE GIVING AND
VOLUNTEERING BEHAVIOR. Naoko Okuyama, Osaka University
MEASURING THE SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC IMPACT OF VOLUNTEERING
IN EUROPE. Daniela Bosioc, CEV; Lester M. Salamon, Center
for Civil Society Studies – Johns Hopkins University; Ksenija
Fonovi, SPES - Associazione Promozione e Solidarietà
Chair:
Naoto Yamauchi, Osaka University School of
International Public Policy
E3
Room 6
EVALUATION OF THE UK’S INTERNATIONAL CITIZENS’ SERVICE:
CRITICAL METHODOLOGICAL REFLECTIONS FROM THE MID TERM
REVIEW STAGE. Matthew Hill, Institute for Volunteering
Research
Room 5
Capabilities for Non Profit. Antonio D’Alessandro, Centre for
Voluntary Service
NPO Governance: Beneficiaries in Perspective
HYBRID GOVERNANCE STRUCTURES OF MENTAL HEALTH
CONSUMER-RUN SELF-HELP ORGANIZATIONS IN EUROPE, NORTH
AMERICA, AND ASIA. Rosario Laratta, Meiji University,
Governance School; Thomasina J. Borkman, George Mason
University
Chair:
Joanna Wheeler, Institute of Development Studies
22
W E D N E S DAY , J U LY 11, 2012
E6
Room F
Politics of Translation: Impact of Donor Civil Society Policy
on Local NGO Relationships. Markus Ketola, London School
of Economics
Civil Society Actors in Human Rights Protection
and Education
Chair:
Alison Dunn, Newcastle University
INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE IN AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES: THE RISE OF
HUMAN RIGHTS CENTERS AND DEGREE PROGRAMS. David Suarez,
University of Southern California
NATIONAL NGOS MONITORING INTERNATIONAL RIGHTS: ARE THERE
REGIME TYPES IN CHILDREN’S RIGHTS? Johan Vamstad, Ersta
Skondal University College
E9
Institutional Models for NPOs
WHEN TOO MUCH IS NOT ENOUGH: SEVERE AND SYSTEMATIC
HUMAN RIGHTS ABUSES AGAINST TRANSMIGRANTS IN MEXICO AND
LOW LEVELS OF TRANSNATIONAL SHAMING. Olga Aikin, Instituto
Tecnologico y de Estudios Superiores (ITESO)
MODELO DE INSTITUCIONALIDAD PARA ORGANIZACIONES DE LA
SOCIEDAD CIVIL: UNA APROXIMACIÓN A LA REALIDAD NACIONAL
EN MÉXICO. Humberto Muñoz Grandé, Universidad Nacional
Autónoma de México; Roberto Arce Rodríguez, Fundación
para el Desarrollo del Tercer Sector AC; María Teresa Arce
Rodríguez, Fundación para el Desarrollo del Tercer Sector AC
Chair:
Susan Kenny, Deakin University
E7
Room B
NEW INSTITUTIONAL ECONOMICS AND THE LIVELY ARTS:
EXPLORATORY CASE ANALYSES. Charles Gray, University of
St. Thomas
Room D
PANEL: Web 2.0., Civil Society Organization and
Mobilization
ORGANIZATIONAL FEATURES, EXTERNAL CONSTRAINTS AND
INSTITUTIONAL CAPACITY OF BUSINESS ASSOCIATION: EVIDENCE
FROM CHINA. Wei Wu, University of International Business and
Economics
CIVIL SOCIETY ONLINE? VOLUNTARY ORGANIZATIONS` ONLINE
REPRESENTATION. Ivar Eimhjellen, The Rokkan Centre for
Social Research
Chair:
Ramya Ramanath, DePaul University
CIVIL SOCIETY ORGANIZATIONS GOVERNANCE AND THE INTERNET.
Philippe Eynaud, IAE de Paris, Université Panthéon Sorbonne
CIVIC AND POLITICAL MOBILIZATION THROUGH SOCIAL MEDIA.
Bernard Enjolras, Institute for Social Research; Kari SteenJohnsen, Institute for Social Research; Dag Wollebaek,
University of Bergen
E10
RETHINKING ‘CIVIL SOCIETY’ VIA THE SOCIOLOGY OF FLOWS.
CROWDFUNDING AS SPACES OF ALTERNATIVE ORDERING? Laurent
Marti, Research Institute for Organizational Psychology
University of St. Gallen; Pascal Dey, University of St. Gallen
TOWARD A NORMATIVE THEORY OF SECTOR SELECTION. Peter
J Frumkin, RGK Center for Philanthropy and Community
Service, University of Texas; Suzi Sosa, RGK Center for
Philanthropy and Community Service at the Lyndon B.
Johnson School of Public Affairs, University of Texas
Chairs:
Kari Steen-Johnsen, Institute for Social Research
NONPROFIT SOCIAL ENTERPRISE ACTIVITY: RISKY
COMMERCIALIZATION OR SOURCE OF GROWTH? Kate Cooney,
Boston University
E8
Room C
PANEL: Social Enterprises and Institutional
Logics: Managing Forms, Resources, and Politics
WHEN COMPETING LOGICS ENTER ORGANIZATIONS: THE POLITICS
OF ORGANIZATIONAL RESPONSES TO CONFLICTING INSTITUTIONAL
DEMANDS. Anne-Claire Pache, ESSEC Business School
Room E
Embedded in Communities: Third Sector
Organizations Working Locally
Chair:
Kate Cooney, Boston University
POLICY, POLITICS AND THE HELPING RELATION IN EMPLOYMENT
ACTIVATION: A COMMUNITY-BASED MODEL. Deena White,
Université de Montréal
E11
POLITICAL OPPORTUNITY STRUCTURES AND SOCIAL NETWORKS
WITHIN THE LOCAL CONTEXT. Susanne Wallman Lundåsen,
Institute for Civil Society Studies, Ersta Sköndal University
College
Room 3A
Accountability in Different Contexts
FORCES SHAPING THE SOUTH KOREAN NGO SECTOR AND THEIR
IMPACTS ON THE NGO ACCOUNTABILITY ENVIRONMENT. Bok Gyo
Jonathan Jeong, University of Pittsburgh
A COMPARISON STUDY OF LOCAL ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
PROGRAMMES (LED). Precious T. T. Nwachukwu, University of
Zululand
23
T H U R S DAY , J U LY 12, 2012
E14
IS THERE A DIFFERENCE IN FUNDING AND ACCOUNTABILITY
BETWEEN RURAL AND URBAN-BASED NGOS? THE CASE OF
PUBLIC BENEFIT ORGANIZATIONS IN THE CZECH REPUBLIC. Jarmila
Curtiss, Leibniz Institute of Agricultural Economics in Central
and Eastern Europe
Understanding Local Perspectives, Relations and
Context in NGO Capacity-Building
AMERICAN INDIAN NONPROFIT ORGANIZATIONS: A CASE STUDY
OF TRIBAL SOVEREIGNTY, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND SOCIAL
JUSTICE. Peg Bortner, Arizona State University; Carol Chiago
Lujan, Arizona State University; William Murphy, Arizona
State University
THE ACCOUNTABILITY OF MARKET-ORIENTED DEVELOPMENT
ORGANIZATIONS. Aline Wachner, Zeppelin University
CHANGES IN NORMATIVE SYSTEMS AND MULTI-SPATIALITY: A
MEDIA CONTENT ANALYSIS OF INDIAN MICROFINANCE IN TIMES OF
CRISIS. Sofia Altafi, Stockholm School of Economics
JOINING THE DOTS: PHILANTHROPY, SOCIAL JUSTICE AND A
SUSTAINABLE CIVIL SOCIETY IN SOUTH AFRICA. Gaby Ritchie,
The SA Institute of Advancement; Melanie Judge, Inyathelo
Chair:
Putnam Barber, Nancy Bell Evans Center on Nonprofits
and Philanthropy, University of Washington
E12
Room A1
A MODEL FOR IMPROVED NGO AND RELATED CAPACITY
BUILDING IN DEVELOPING NATIONS: THE CASE FOR A BALANCED,
COLLABORATIVE APPROACH BY HOST SOCIETIES AND EXTERNAL
AGENTS. Richard Bush, Southern Illinois University
Room 3B
Chair:
Susan D. Phillips, Carleton University
Exploring Pedagogy and the Third Sector
INTERNATIONAL PEDAGOGY: NONPROFITS IN CIVIL SOCIETY - A
GUATEMALAN CASE STUDY. Teresa VanHorn, University of San
Diego
TEACHING AND LEARNING ABOUT NONPROFIT ORGANIZATIONS
FROM A GLOBAL PERSPECTIVE: A CASE STUDY OF KENNESAW
STATE UNIVERSITY. Jennifer A. Wade-Berg, Kennesaw State
University; Ardith A. Peters, Kennesaw State University; Anne
Hicks-Coolick, Kennesaw State University
THURSDAY, JULY, 12
Thursday, July 12, 2012
THE GIVING UNIVERSITY AND ITS PEDAGOGY. Antonio Sama,
CCCU; Elizabeth Hooult, Faculty of Education, CCCU
9:00 a.m. - 10:30 a.m.
Chair:
Kristin F. Strømsnes, Stein Rokkan Centre for Social
Studies, University of Bergen
Parallel Session
A
F1
E13
Room A
F
Room 2
Managerialism: The Old and New Concepts
PANEL: Innovations in Relationship Between Non-Profit
Sector and For-Profit Sector
TOWARDS PROFESSIONALISM – EVIDENCE OF NPOS’ ORGANIZATION
DEVELOPMENT PROJECTS. Katalin Dobrai, University of Pécs;
Ferenc Farkas, University of Pécs
A Social Subsidiary Weaving Factory. Giorgio Fiorentini,
Università Bocconi; Francesca Calo, Università Bocconi
TRANSFORMATIONS WITHIN CIVIL SOCIETY: THE CONSEQUENCES OF
MANAGERIALISM. Georg von Schnurbein, University of Basel
Innovation in the Partnership Between Firms and Not For
Profit Organizations or Social Enterprises: Best Practices.
Federica Bandini, Bocconi University; Alessia Anzivino, SDA
Bocconi
NONPROFIT MANAGERIALISM AND ITS RELATIVES - A SYSTEMATIC
REVIEW. Florentine Maier, WU Vienna University of
Economics and Business; Michael Meyer, University of
Economics, Vienna; Martin Steinbereithner, WU Vienna
University of Economics and Business
Social Entrepreneurship as a Cure for Global Disease - A
China Perspective. Li Xiaosong, CIBE, Bejiing; Li Yuan,
CIBE, Bejiing; Marta Caccamo, CIBE, Bejiing; Stephan
Rothlin, CIBE, Bejiing
Chair:
Ola Segnestam Larsson, Ersta Skondal University
College
Innovative Relationships Between Social Enterprises and
the For-Profit Enterprises: Progetto De Medici. Andrea
Ripamonti, Spazio Aperto
Chair:
Elio Borgonovi, Università Bocconi
24
T H U R S DAY , J U LY 12, 2012
F2
Room 4
THE DISSOLUTION OF VOLUNTARY ASSOCIATIONS IN FINLAND:
TRENDS AND CAUSES. Dan Sundblom, Åbo Akademi University
PANEL: Facilitating Active Citizenship: What
Role for the Third Sector?
A VOLUNTARY SECTOR WITH FEW VOLUNTEERS - A PROBLEM FOR
COMPARATIVE SOCIOLOGY. THE FINNISH CASE. Susan Sundback,
Abo Akademi University
ACTIVE CITIZENSHIP AND THE THIRD SECTOR: CONTEXT MATTERS.
Susan Kenny, Deakin University
URBAN AND RURAL DIVIDE?: INVESTIGATING WITHIN COUNTRY
DIFFERENCES IN VOLUNTARY ASSOCIATIONS IN SWEDEN. Susanne
Wallman Lundåsen, Institute for Civil Society Studies, Ersta
Sköndal University College
ACTIVE CITIZENSHIP AND THE EMERGENCE OF NETWORKS. Jenny
Onyx, University of Technology, Sydney
REBALANCING THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN CITIZEN AND STATE.
Marilyn E. Taylor, University of the West of England
Chair:
Mikko Lagerspetz, Åbo Akademi University
NARRATIVES OF ACTIVE CITIZENSHIP: HOW PEOPLE BECOME AND
STAY INVOLVED IN DIFFERENT TYPES OF PARTICIPATION OVER THEIR
LIFETIME. Ellie Brodie, NCVO, The National Council for
Voluntary Organisations
F5
Social Economy and Social Enterprise:
Observations and Investigations
Chairs:
Rosemary Leonard, University of Western Sydney
Susan Kenny, Deakin University
F3
Room 7
LA MISE À DISTANCE DU MOUVEMENT DES FEMMES PAR
L’ÉCONOMIE SOCIALE: RÉFLEXIONS SUR LE CAS QUÉBÉCOIS.
Pierre-Andre Tremblay, Universite du Quebec a Chicoutimi;
Eloise Gaudreau, Universite du Quebec a Chicoutimi;
Danielle Maltais, Universite du Quebec a Chicoutimi;
Marielle Tremblay, Universite du Quebec a Chicoutimi;
Suzanne Tremblay, Universite du Quebec a Chicoutimi
Room 5
PANEL: Giving Europe: Research Questions,
Theories, and Methodology
DEFINING EUROPEAN PHILANTHROPY. Theo Schuyt, VU
University Amsterdam
THE HUB EXPERIENCE AND SOCIAL INNOVATION IN SICILY: THE
THIRD SECTOR AND ITS ROLE IN DEMOCRATIZING THE ECONOMY.
Maria Olivella Rizza, University Of Catania
GIVING IN EVIDENCE: LESSONS LEARNT. Barbara Gouwenberg,
VU University Amsterdam
COMMUNITY CO-OPERATIVES AND SOCIAL CAPITAL BUILDING ON
THE NEIGHBOURHOOD LEVEL: EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE FROM VIENNA.
Richard Lang, WU – Vienna University of Economics and
Business; Dagmara Pogorzelska, RiCC – Research Institute
for Co-operation and Co-operatives, WU – Vienna University
of Economics and Business
MEASURING THE SOCIOECONOMIC IMPACT OF PHILANTHROPIC
FOUNDATIONS: THE METHODOLOGY OF THE INSTITUTE FOR
STRATEGIC ANALYSIS OF FOUNDATIONS (INAEF). Ana Isabel Do
Rego Felgueiras, Universidade da Coruña; Marta Rey Garcia,
Universidade da Coruna; Luis Ignacio Alvarez Gonzalez,
University of Oviedo
CHALLENGES FOR COMPARATIVE RESEARCH ON PHILANTHROPY IN
EUROPE. Rene Bekkers, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Chair:
Alice Del Vecchio, Slippery Rock University
Chair:
Rene Bekkers, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
F6
F4
Getting Fit for the Future! Nonprofits Venturing
new Initiatives
Room 6
PANEL: Sustainability of Voluntary Associations:
Organizations and Their Environments in
International Comparison
Room F
NONPROFIT SOCIAL MEDIA POLICIES: MANAGING RISK, MAXIMIZING
OPPORTUNITIES. Jennifer Amanda Jones, University of San
Diego
FORGING NEW VALUES AND RELATIONSHIPS IN TROUBLED FISCAL
TIMES IN THE US, CANADA AND BRITAIN. Kathy Brock, Queen’s
University
TRAJECTORIES OF DIFFERENTIATION: A COMPARATIVE REASSESSMENT
OF CIVIL SOCIETIES IN EASTERN AND CENTRAL EUROPE. Erle
Rikmann, Estonian Institute of Humanities; Liisi Keedus,
Centre for Civil Society Research and Development, Tallinn
University
STRATEGIC CAPACITY BUILDING: THEORY, METHOD, AND THE CASE
OF FAITH BASED INITIATIVES. Anthony Bertelli, University of
Southern California; Dyana Mason, University of Southern
California; Andrew Whitford, University of Georgia
AN INTEGRATED PERSPECTIVE ON ORGANIZATIONAL SURVIVAL:
THE CASE OF LOCAL VOLUNTARY ASSOCIATIONS IN NORWAY,
1980-2009. Dag Wollebaek, University of Bergen; Kristin
Strømsnes, University of Bergen; Åsta Dyrnes Nordø, Centre
for Research on Civil Society and Voluntary Sector
COMMUNITY HEROES, SURVIVORS OR CASUALTIES? EXPLORING
VOLUNTARY SECTOR RISKS AND RESILIENCE. Linda Milbourne,
25
T H U R S DAY , J U LY 12, 2012
Birkbeck College
TO PASS THE BATON. SUCCESSION STRATEGIES OF ITALIAN
NONPROFIT LEADERS. Andrea Bassi, University of Bologna
Chair:
Michael D. Layton, Instituto Technológico Autónomo de
México
SUPPORTING SOCIAL ENTREPRENEURS. THE EFFECTS OF
ORGANIZATIONAL MATURITY AND BUSINESS MODEL ON PERCEIVED
SUPPORT NEEDS. Peter Vandor, WU Vienna University of
Economics and Business - Institute for Entrepreneurship
and Innovation; Hinnerk Hansen, WU Vienna University of
Economics and Business - Institute for Entrepreneurship
and Innovation; Reinhard Millner, WU Vienna University of
Economics and Business – Nonprofit Management Group
F7
Room D
International Case Studies on Development
and Growth
ICT ADOPTION IN THE SMALL SOCIAL ENTERPRISES IN SPAIN:
AN EMPIRICAL STUDY. Gloria Estapa Dubreuil, Universitat
Autònoma de Barcelona; Consol Torreguitart Mirada,
Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
COMMODITY VERTICAL DIVERSIFICATION GROWTH IN ETHIOPIA:
A CASE STUDY OF THIRD SECTOR IMPACT ON GROWTH. Bemnet
Yigzaw, DePaul University
UNWELCOME CHANGE: A CASE STUDY OF EAST AFRICAN
NONGOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS (NGOS) AND THEIR EMBRACE
OF SOCIAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP AS A SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT MODEL.
Kinoti Meme, Regis University
Chair:
Lars Hulgård, Roskilde University
IN-GROUP COLLECTIVISM VERSUS INSTITUTIONAL COLLECTIVISM:
A CASE STUDY OF SOCIAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP DEVELOPMENT IN
TAIWAN. Ming-Rea Kao, National Sun Yat-sen University;
Chang-Yu Huang, Department of Business Management,
National Sun Yat-Sen University
F10
INTER-RELATIONSHIPS IN THE PUBLIC SPHERE: NONPROFIT
ORGANIZATIONS AND POLITICAL CHANGE. Philippe Eynaud, IAE
de Paris, Université Panthéon Sorbonne; Damien Mourey, IAE
de Paris, Université Panthéon Sorbonne; Carolyn Cordery,
Victoria University of Wellington
ANALYSIS ON SOCIAL ENTERPRISE MODELS IN CHINA. Rong Tian,
Nanjing University; Lucy Jordan, University of Southampton
Chair:
Shih-Jung Hsu, National Chengchi University
F8
THE VALUES AND THE VALUE OF MONEY: HYPOTHESIS TO
COMMENSURATE THE IMPACT OF SOCIAL PROJECTS. Eloisa Helena
De Souza Cabral, Fundacao Armando Alvares Penteado
(FAAP); Paulo de Tarso Muzy, Fundacao Armando Alvares
Penteado (FAAP)
Room E
Becoming More Business Like?
THE SOCIO-CULTURAL REPORT OF THE CHIGIANA MUSIC
ACADEMY OF SIENA: A MODEL OF EVALUATION OF IMPACT ON
TERRITORY, ADMINISTRATIVE RESPONSABILITY, AND COLLECTIVE
LEGITIMISATION. Michela Magliacani, University of Siena;
Maria Cleofe Giorgino, University of Siena
RESOURCE CONSTRAINTS OR CULTURAL CONFORMITY? NONPROFIT
RELATIONSHIPS WITH BUSINESSES. David Suarez, University of
Southern California; Hokyu Hwang, University of New South
Wales
RELATIONSHIPS AMONG ENTREPRENEURIAL ORIENTATION,
ORGANIZATIONAL LEARNING AND EFFECTIVENESS IN THE GREEK
NONPROFIT SECTOR. Christina Giannopoulou, Athens
University of Economics and Business; Anthony Ioannidis,
Athens University of Economics and Business
Chair:
Oonagh Breen, University College Dublin
F11
Room 3A
Methodology and Design in Third Sector research
BECOMING MORE BUSINESS-LIKE? MARKETISATION AND ITS IMPACT
ON THE CONSTRUCTION OF NPO IDENTITY IN SOUTH AFRICA.
Frederik Claeyé, Lille Catholic University; Nathalie van
Meurs, Middlesex University Business School, London
Entre Qualité Et Quantité, Quels Indicateurs Pour Une
Évaluation des Etablissements d’Accueil du Jeune Enfant
(EAJE) à la Croisée des Logiques Éducatives, Associatives et
Gestionnaires Yannig Robin, Ubo Brest
Chair:
Jacques Defourny, University of Liege
F9
Room C
Beyond Impact Measurement Techniques
Interpreting the Data from the CIVICUS Civil Society Index
with a Mixed Method Design. Wolfgang Doerner, University
of Siena
Room B
Social Economy and Organisational Dynamics
The Collective Interview. Gesa Birnkraut, University of
Applied Sciences Osnabrueck
SUCCESSION PROCESS IN SOCIAL ENTERPRISES IN BRAZIL:
CHALLENGES OR OPPORTUNITIES? Rosa Maria Fischer,
University of Sao Paulo
Chair:
Lucia Boccacin, Universitat Cattolica del S. Cuore
26
T H U R S DAY , J U LY 12, 2012
F12
Room 3B
GIVING AND VOLUNTEERING IN A TIME OF DISASTER: FINDINGS
FROM THE NATIONWIDE SURVEY AFTER THE GREAT EAST JAPAN
EARTHQUAKE. Naoto Yamauchi, Osaka University School
of International Public Policy; Naoko Okuyama, Osaka
University
Islam, State and Civil Society in a Changing World
Islamic Non Profit Organizations in the Post 9/11 Era. Habibe
Ilhan, Suleyman Sah University
RISING LOCAL POWER – FROM FUKUSHIMA’S EXPERIENCE AFTER THE
3.11 EARTHQUAKE. Kaori Kuroda, CSO Network
Practicing Rights and Obligations: Civil Society Organizations
in Turkey. Didem Cakmakli, Koc University
The Revolution in Egypt: A Civil Society in Transformation.
Mouzayian Khalil, University of Warwick
Chair:
Naoto Yamauchi, Osaka University School of
International Public Policy
Chair:
Robert F. Ashcraft, Arizona State University
SPECIAL SESSION: Getting Published
F13
5:30-6:30pm
Room A
PANEL: When Communication Encounters Social
Responsibility
Bernard Enjolras
Voluntas, Editor
Teresa Krauss
Springer, Senior Editor
“COMMON GOOD” AND PARTICIPATIVE DEMOCRACY. Francesca
Belotti, University of Rome
THIRD SECTOR AND NEW MODELS OF PARTICIPATIOn. Barbara
Mazza, University of the Studies of Teramo
Rosemary Leonard
Third Sector Review, Editor
RADICAL MEDIA: EXAMPLES OF NEWSMAKING IN SOCIAL
COMMUNICATION. Gaia Peruzzi, University of Rome
Lucas Meijs
NVSQ, Editor
THE ROLE OF THIRD SECTOR IN BUILDING A NEW SOCIAL
COMMUNICATION. Andrea Volterrani, Tor Vergata University of
Rome
In this session, journal editors will give advice, based on their
experience and practice, on how to get through the publishing
process. What are editors and publishers policies and expectations?
What are the main traps to avoid? What matters and helps?
Participants will also get the opportunity to exchange their
experiences and advice.
Chair:
Mario Morcellini, Department of Communication and
Social Research, University of Rome
F14
Chair: Dennis Young
Nonprofit Management & Leadership, Founding Editor
Room A1
PANEL: Theoretical Grounding of Civic Driven Change
11:00 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.
Civic Driven Change and New Domains for Civic
Energy. Alan F. Fowler, Institute of Social Studies,
Erasmus University; Kees Biekart, Institute of Social
Studies (ISS)
Parallel Session
G1
Exploring the Civic Energy of Market-based Actors.
Kees Biekart, Institute of Social Studies (ISS); Peter
Knorringa, Institute of Social Studies
Room 2
SPECIAL SESSION:
Civil Society at the Crossroads? Citizen Energy and
Social Change
Chair:
Alan F. Fowler, Institute of Social Studies, Erasmus
University
F15
G
Anabel Cruz
Instituto de Comunicación y Desarrollo (ICD), Chile case
James Taylor
Community Development Resources Association (CDRA), South
Africa case
Room 4
PANEL: The Roles of Civil Society and Social
Capital on Post-Disaster Reconstruction
Lau Schulpen
Centre for International Development Issues Nijmegen (CIDIN)
Lucas Meijs
Erasmus Research Institute of Management
SIGNIFICANCE OF SOCIAL CAPITAL IN DISASTER REDUCTION AND
RECOVERY. Yasuo Kawawaki, International Recovery Platform
27
T H U R S DAY , J U LY 12, 2012
Vilhena, Universiddae Técnica de Lisboa - Instituto Superior
de Ciências Sociais e Politicas
Cristien Temmink
PSO, Netherlands case.
Discussant: L. David Brown
Hauser Center for Non-profit Organizations, Harvard University
Chair:
Taco Brandsen, Radboud University Nijmegen
This session will examine emerging citizen activism around the world
and its implications for the evolution of civil society and its future
impacts on social inclusion, justice and equity. It will report on
examples of citizen initiatives and civil society development in Chile,
India, South Africa, and the United Kingdom and ask panelists and
audience to join in identifying implications for research, practice and
policy-making in the future.
G4
Room 6
Learning From the Past: Philanthropy Over Time
FROM PHILANTHROPY TO CITIZENSHIP: INFLUENCE OF SOCIAL
RIGHTS ON THE MISSION OF NONPROFIT ORGANIZATIONS. Marcia
Moussallem, IATS - Institute for Third Sector management; Luiz
Carlos Merege, IATS - Institute for Third Sector Management
Chair: Rajesh Tandon
Society for Participatory Research in Asia (PRIA), India case
Corporate Social (Ir)Responsibility
TRENDS IN COMMUNITY BASED PHILANTHROPY—UNITED WAY OF
AMERICA FUNDING ACROSS TIME AND PLACE. Laurie Paarlberg,
University of North Carolina Wilmington; Stephen Meinhold,
University of North Carolina Wilmington
FORMALIZING CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY. Seungwha
(Andy) Chung, Yonsei University; Na Sung Pyo, Yonsei
University; Hyunsang Pyo, Yonsei University; Jiman Lee,
Yonsei University
A QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS OF CHARITABLE CAUSES IN 20TH
CENTURY ENGLAND. Peter Backus, Third Sector Research
Centre, University of Southampton
G2
Room 4
THE EVOLUTION OF RESEARCH ON PHILANTHROPY AND NONPROFIT
ORGANIZATIONS AS AN INTELLECTUAL FIELD: AN ANALYSIS OF
LEADING JOURNALS. Elizabeth A. Graddy, University of
Southern California; James M. Ferris, University of Southern
California; Yu Jean Sohn, University of Southern California
THE ‘SERVICE SOCIAL-BENEFIT CHAIN’ OF A UK FOOD
COOPERATIVE. John Reed, Liverpool John Moores University
UNDERSTANDING THE CONCEPTUALIZATION OF CORPORATE SOCIAL
IRRESPONSIBILITY ON SPORT ORGANIZATIONS. Jer San Hu, Fu
Jen Catholic University; Chien Hsien Lee, Fu-Jen Catholic
University; Haw Ran Wong, Fu-Jen Catholic University, Tzuyi
Kao, Fu-Jen Catholic University
Chair:
Janice L. H. Nga, Universiti Malaysia Sabah
Chair:
Junqing Li, Minzu University of China
G5
Room 7
Roles of Philanthropy Revisited
G3
Room 5
Social Entrepreneurship: Cultural and Social
Frameworks
Can Private Philanthropy be Considered as a Part of a
Coherent Approach to Meeting Public Welfare Need?
Catherina Pharoah, Sir John Cass Business School
CULTURES MATTER: AN ANALYTIC FRAMEWORK FOR SOCIAL
ENTREPRENEURSHIP. Ming-Rea Kao, National Sun Yat-sen
University; Chang-Yu Huang, Department of Business
Management, National Sun Ya
Can Philanthropy Contribute to the Reform of Financial
Markets? Options and Constraints of Private Foundations.
Lorenzo Fioramonti, Hertie School of Governance; Ekkehard
Thuemler, Centre for Social Investment at the University of
Heidelberg
GENESIS OF SOCIAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP – A MICRO SOCIOLOGICAL
ANALYSIS. Gladius Kulothungan, University of East London
Cross- Sector Collaboration: Relationships between
Philanthropic Foundations and the Government in Social
Policy Making in Israel. Ester Zychlinski, Ariel University
Center; Michal Almog-Bar, Baerwald School of Social Work
and Social Welfare, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
THE IMPACT OF THIRD SECTOR BASED SOCIAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP
ON SOCIO-ECONOMIC STRUCTURES. Lars Hulgård, Roskilde
University; Guadalupe Palacios, Faculty of Economics of
Universidad Michoacana de San Nicolás de Hidalgo
APPLYING THE CONCEPT OF SOCIAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP TO
THE BRAZILIAN EXPERIENCE OF THE INCUBATORS OF POPULAR
COOPERATIVES. Cristina Parente, Universidade do Porto;
Allan Claudius Queiróz Barbosa, Universidade Federal de
Minas Gerais - Faculdade de Ciências Económicas; Flávia
Chair:
Eleanor Woodward Sacks
28
T H U R S DAY , J U LY 12, 2012
G6
Room F
Transnational Volunteering
MOBILIZATION BY CIVIL SOCIETY AND THE POLITICS OF SOCIAL
POLICY DEVELOPMENT IN HONG KONG. Eliza W.Y. Lee, The
University of Hong Kong
TRANSNATIONAL NETWORKS OF RELIGIOUS VOLUNTEERS. Nancy T.
Kinney, University of Missouri - St. Louis
GROUP IDENTITY AND CIVIL SOCIETY DEVELOPMENT IN CHINA.
Fengshi Wu, Chinese University of Hong Kong
YOUTH VOLUNTEER EXCHANGE PROGRAMMES IN SOUTHERN
AND EASTERN AFRICA: MODELS AND EFFECTS. Jacob M. Mati,
University of the Witwatersrand
CIVIL SOCIETY DIVIDED OR UNITED? THE TUG-OF-WAR OVER
“NATIONAL EDUCATION” IN POST-1997 HONG KONG. Thomas Tse,
Chinese University of Hong Kong
THE SPECTRUM OF MOTIVATIONS AND EXPECTATIONS IN
DEVELOPMENT COOPERATION – EXPERIENCES OF VOLUNTEERS TO
TECHNICAL ADVISORS. Pamela White, University of Helsinki
Chairs:
Min-hsiu Jiang, National Chengchi University
Kin-man Chan, The Chinese University of Hong Kong
Discussant:
Fengshi Wu, Chinese University of Hong Kong
RELIGIOUS ENGAGEMENT IN THE THIRD SECTOR: A CHRISTIAN
AND ISLAMIC COMPARISON IN THE NETHERLANDS. Gürkan Çelik,
Windesheim University of Applied Sciences; Iris Creemers,
Dialoog Academie
G9
Chair:
Jacqueline Butcher de Rivas, CIESC, A.C.
G7
THE THIRD SECTOR PARADOX IN DEMOCRATIC NETWORK
GOVERNANCE. Silvia Ferreira, Lancaster University (UK) /
Universidade de Coimbra (Portugal)
Room D
PANEL: Volunteers and Paid Staff Members in
Hybrid Organizations
STUDYING THE PARTICIPATION OF NON-STATE ACTORS IN POLICYPROCESSES USING QUALITATIVE SOCIAL NETWORK ANALYSIS.
Wolfgang Doerner, University of Siena
A THEORY INFORMED SURVEY RESEARCH APPROACH TO HYBRID
ORGANIZATION’S IMPACT ON CIVILITY IN THE CONTEXT OF
VOLUNTEERING. Anael Labigne, Hertie School of Governance
COMPARING GOVERNANCE PATTERNS: THE PLACE OF THIRD
SECTOR ORGANIZATIONS IN POLICY NARRATIVES ACROSS NATIONS.
Nicholas V. Acheson, University of Ulster; Rachel Laforest,
Queen’s University
THE IMPACT OF ORGANIZATIONAL OBJECTIVES ON THE POSITION OF
VOLUNTEERS AND ON THE MEANING THEY EXPERIENCE IN THEIR
ENGAGEMENT: A CASE-STUDY. Erik Claes, University College
Brussels; Emilie Van Daele, University College Brussels
A TALE OF TWO PROFESSIONS: COMPARING THE USE OF WEB
2.0 FOR ADVOCACY BETWEEN NONPROFIT PROFESSIONAL
ORGANIZATIONS. Richard Hoefer, University of Texas Arlington; Heather R. Edwards, Wayne State University
SECURING FUNDS AND DEVELOPING ACTIVITIES: HOW DO PUBLIC
POLICIES, RATIONALIZATION AND MANAGERIALISM, INFLUENCE
VOLUNTEERS’ WORLD IN THE FRENCH CONTEXT. Christophe
Dansac, Laboratoire de Recherche Pluridisciplinaire du NordEst de Midi-Pyrénées (LRPMip) / IUT Toulouse 2 Figeac;
Cécile Vachee, Laboratoire de Recherche Pluridisciplinaire
du Nord-Midi-Pyrénées; Patricia Gontier, Laboratoire de
Recherche Pluridisciplinaire du Nord-Midi-Pyrénées; Marc
Carletti, IUT de Figeac
Chair:
Edith J. Archambault, Universite de Paris I – Sorbonne
G10
Room C
Social Economy: Legislation and Economic Policy
Across the Atlantic
Chairs:
Lesley Hustinx, Ghent University
Johan von Essen, Ersta Sköndal Högskola / Uppsala
University
G8
Room B
Third Sector Organizations Participating in
Network Governance
Do EU Legislation and Economic Policies Act in Concert
in Developing a Harmonized Business Theory for Social
Economy and Social Enterprise? Nicole Alix, Confrontations
Europe
Mingling Mission and Market: Assessing the Social Enterprise
of American Low Profit Limited Liability Companies. John C.
Ronquillo, DePaul University
Room E
PANEL: Civil Society and the State in Chinese
Societies: Mainland China, Hong Kong and Taiwan
Understanding the Hybridization of Social Good Provision:
Emerging Legal Forms in the US Case. Stefan Toepler,
George Mason University
TRUSTING CIVIL SOCIETY IN THE CHINESE CONTEXT. Kin-man
Chan, The Chinese University of Hong Kong; Zhu Jiangang,
Zhongshan (Sun Yat-sen) University; Min-hsiu Jiang, National
Chengchi University
Chair:
Graziella Maria Comini, FEA/USP - University of Sao Paulo
29
T H U R S DAY , J U LY 12, 2012
G11
Room 3A
Empirical Approaches to Measuring Impact
STUDENT GIVING, SOLIDARITY, AND CIVIL SOCIETY IN COMMUNIST
EAST GERMANY. Gregory Witkowski, Center on Philanthropy
at Indiana University
ON BECOMING AN UNESCO ASSOCIATED SCHOOL: DOES IT HELP
TO REDUCE PROBLEMS OF TROUBLED YOUTHS? Christine Pascale
Seiger, Zurich University of Applied Psychology; Christoph
Steinebach, Zurich Universiy of Applied Sciences
Chair:
Gregory Witkowski, Center on Philanthropy at Indiana
University
SOCIAL ADDED VALUE FOR SOCIAL COHESION OF ONLINE AND
OFFLINE VOLUNTEERING: THE RESULTS OF AN ACTION-RESEARCH
PROJECT IN TUSCANY. Andrea Volterrani, Università degli Studi
di Roma Tor Vergata - Scuol; Alessio Ceccherelli, Università
di Roma Tor Vergata; Angela Spinelli, Università di Roma Tor
Vergata; Paola Tola, Università di Roma Tor Vergata
G14
Food, Trade and NGOs
FAIR TRADE TOWN MOVEMENT IN JAPAN. Tatsuya Watanabe,
Tokyo University of Economics
TRANSLATING PUBLIC POLICY: ENHANCING THE APPLICABILITY
OF SOCIAL IMPACT TECHNIQUES FOR GRASSROOTS COMMUNITY
GROUPS. Melissa Edwards, University of Technology, Sydney;
Nina Burridge, University of Technology, Sydney; Hilary
Yerbury, University of Technology, Sydney
NGOS AND FOOD SECURITY IN ARMENIA AND GEORGIA. Anna
Jenderedjian, Hohenheim University; Anne C. Bellows,
Hohenheim University
Chair:
Alberto Hernandez Baqueiro, Instituto Tecnologico de
Monterrey
Chair:
Benjamin Gidron, Israeli Social Enterprise Research
Center (ISERC)
G12
Room 3B
2:30 p.m. - 4:00 p.m.
Research Paradigms in Nonprofit Inquiry
Parallel Session
ACTION RESEARCH AND PREPARATION OF LEADERS OF THE THIRD
SECTOR. Mary McDonald, University of San Diego; Paula
Krist, University of San Diego
H1
FEMINIST ETHICS AND STAKEHOLDER THEORY IN THE SOCIAL
ECONOMY. A QUANTITATIVE STUDY OF CORPORATE STAKEHOLDER
RELATIONS IN ITALIAN SOCIAL ENTERPRISES. Lorenzo Dorigo,
Advanced School of Economics Ca’ Foscari University Venice
H
Room 2
PANEL: National Campaigns for Charitable
Causes: An International Perspective
NATIONAL GIVING CAMPAIGNS IN THE UNITED STATES: EMPATHY,
ENTERTAINMENT, AND THE NATIONAL PEER GROUP. Deborah
Philbrick, DePaul University School of Public Service;
Christopher J. Einolf, DePaul University; Kelly Slay, DePaul
University School of Public Service
NON POSITIVIST APPROACHES TO RESEARCH IN THE THIRD SECTOR:
EMPOWERED POLICY-MAKING. Megan Alessandrini, University
of Tasmania
Chair:
Annette Zimmer, Münster University
G13
Room A1
NONPROFITS BETWEEN THE STATE, THE CHURCH AND EMERGING
CIVIL SOCIETY: THE EVOLUTION OF NATIONAL CAMPAIGNS IN SPAIN.
Ana Isabel Do Rego Felgueiras, Universidade da Coruña;
Marta Rey Garcia, Universidade da Coruna; Luis Ignacio
Alvarez Gonzalez, University of Oviedo; Ricard Valls-Riera,
Zohar Consultoria & Marketing Social
Room A
PANEL: Philanthropy, Civil Society and
Democracy in German History
A PART OF THE PROBLEM OR THE SOLUTION? CHARITABLE GIVING
IN THE SWEDISH WELFARE STATE. Johan Vamstad, Ersta Sköndal
University College; Johan von Essen, Ersta Sköndal Högskola
/ Uppsala University
CIVIL SOCIETY AND INTERNATIONAL PHILANTHROPY IN THE
WEIMAR REPUBLIC: THE DEUTSCHE HOCHSCHULE FÜR POLITIK
AND AMERICAN PHILANTHROPIC FOUNDATIONS.” Peter Christian
Weber, Center on Philanthropy at Indiana University
PICTURING GENEROSITY. FACTORS OF SUCCESS AND FAILURE OF
NATIONAL CAMPAIGNS IN THE NETHERLANDS. Pamala Wiepking,
Erasmus Centre for Strategic Philanthropy, Erasmus
University Rotterdam; Marco H.D. van Leeuwen, International
Institute of Social History
AMERICA’ AS AN ARGUMENT. REFORM CONCEPTS FOR ACADEMIC
FOUNDATIONS AND THE PROMOTION OF DEMOCRACY IN THE FEDERAL
REPUBLIC OF GERMANY. Arnd Bauerkämper, Freie Universität
Berlin
Chairs:
Pamala Wiepking, Erasmus Centre for Strategic
Philanthropy, Erasmus University Rotterdam
30
T H U R S DAY , J U LY 12, 2012
H2
Room 4
STAKEHOLDERS. Maiu Uus, PRAXIS Centre for Policy
Studies
AND
Nonprofit Board: Influence, Performance, and the
Questions of Improvement
WHO AND WHY PEOPLE SUPPORT THE MINORITY COMMUNITYBASED ORGANIZATIONS IN USA? - EXAMINING THE BURMESE
REFUGEES INDIGENOUS ORGANIZATIONS IN INDIANA. Lijun He,
Center on Philanthropy, Indiana University
EXPLORING FACTORS THAT INFLUENCE BOARD MEMBER
ENGAGEMENT AND BOARD PERFORMANCE. William Brown, Texas
A&M University
VOLUNTARY SUPPORT NETWORK FOR THE ELDERLY FOREIGNER:
A NEW MOVEMENT OF KOREAN OLD COMERS IN KYOTO (JAPAN).
Wataru Ozawa, Ritsumeikan University
EXAMINING THE INFLUENCE OF BOARD DONORS ON NONPROFIT
ORGANIZATIONAL PERFORMANCE. Theresa Hilliard, Georgia
State University; Keisha Nichols, Georgia State University;
Andy Tang, Georgia State University; Ram Sriram, Georgia
State University
Chair:
Gojko Bezovan, University of Zagreb
PATHWAYS FOR IMPROVING NON-PROFIT BOARDS. Pau Vidal,
Observatori Tercer Sector
H5
Chair:
David Renz, University of Missouri - Kansas City
H3
RECLAIMING CIVIL SOCIETY SPACE FOR DEVELOPMENT:
MOTIVATIONS, IMPACT AND SOLUTIONS TO SHRINKING CIVIL
SOCIETY SPACE IN AFRICA. Paul Okumu, Africa CSO Platform
on Principled Partnership
Room 5
Volunteer Management
COLLABORATIVE POWER FOR DEVELOPMENT: NGOS AND THE
GOVERNANCE OF DISTRIBUTED ELECTRICITY PROGRAMS IN AFRICA.
Jennifer Brass, School for Public & Environmental Affairs;
Lauren MacLean, Indiana University; Sanya Carley, Indiana
University
EXPLORING THE ‘NURTURE’ OF VOLUNTEER COORDINATION. Sibylle
Studer, Centre for Philanthropy Studies, University of Basel;
Georg von Schnurbein, University of Basel
FROM AMATEUR PRACTICES TO PROFESSIONALIZATION: A STUDY
OF VOLUNTEER WORK IN BRAZILIAN HOSPITALS. Cesar Ribeiro,
Catholic University of Parana; Victor Meyer Jr., Pontifical
Catholic University of Parana; Lucilaine Pascuci, Pontifical
Catholic University of Parana; J. Patrick Murphy, DePaul
University
LAS ORGANIZACIONES DE LA SOCIEDAD CIVIL MEXICANAS Y
LA COOPERACIÓN AL DESARROLLO: ESTRATEGIAS Y ENFOQUES.
Cristina Girado, El Colegio Mexiquense; Imke Hindrichs,
University of Torino; Daniela Converso, University of Torino
CIVIL SOCIETY AND NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT: ISSUES AND
CHALLENGES. Janice L. H. Nga, Universiti Malaysia Sabah;
Victor King, The University of Leeds; Michael Parnwell
VOLUNTEER MANAGEMENT IN PALLIATIVE CARE IN THE UK:
CURRENT PRACTICES, CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES FOR
DEVELOPMENT. Matthew Hill, Institute for Volunteering
Research; Amanda Wilmot, Institute for Volunteering
Research; Sara Morris, International Observatory on End of
Life Care, Lancaster University; Sheila Payne, International
Observatory on End of Life Care, Lancaster University
Chair:
Anabel Cruz, Instituto de Comunicacion y Desarrollo
(ICD)
THE TRANSITION FROM PARTICIPANT TO LEADER IN SURF LIFE
SAVING: A PROCESS OF SELF-VERIFICATION. Patrick Gillett,
Southern Cross University; Simon Wilde, Southern Cross
University
H6
Room F
PANEL: Law, Regulation and the Nonprofit
Sector: New Developments and Comparative
Perspectives
Chair:
Eleanor Brown, Pomona College
H4
Room 7
Is Civil Society Still the “Soft Power” Behind
Development?
REGULATORY SHIFTS: CURRENT DEVELOPMENTS IN REGULATORY
FRAMEWORKS UNDER THE CHARITY COMMISSION FOR ENGLAND AND
WALES. Alison Dunn, Newcastle University
Room 6
MANAGING INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY FOR THIRD SECTOR INITIATIVES
THROUGH FRANCHISING. Elizabeth Spencer, Bond University
Experiences of Inclusion and Exclusion and Civil
Society’s Intermediary Role
PRESSING NONPROFITS FOR REVENUE WHILE DEMANDING THEY
DO MORE: NEW DEVELOPMENTS IN PROPERTY TAX AND SALES
TAX DISPUTES IN THE UNITED STATES. Mark Sidel, University of
Wisconsin-Madison
SOCIAL MOVEMENTS AND INCLUSIONARY POLITICS: CHALLENGES
AND OPPORTUNITIES FOR THE THIRD SECTOR. Samiul Hasan,
United Arab Emirates University
THE CHANGE OF ENGAGEMENT PRACTICES IN ESTONIAN
POLICYMAKING: CONVERGENT PERCEPTIONS OF PUBLIC OFFICIALS
Chair:
Mark Sidel, University of Wisconsin-Madison
31
T H U R S DAY , J U LY 12, 2012
H7
Room D
Theoretical Introduction to Mult-Stakeholding Enterprises.
Isabel Vidal, Universidad de Barcelona
Modern Management Issues for NPOs
ACHIEVEMENT-ORIENTED MANAGEMENT IN N.P.OS – WHAT CAN
BE LEARNED FROM SUCCESSFUL BUSINESS MANAGERS? Ronit Amit,
Gandyr Foundation
Chair:
Victor A. Pestoff, Ersts-Skondal University College
EXPLORING THE STAKEHOLDER MANAGEMENT MODEL IN NONPROFIT
ORGANIZATIONS : THE CASE OF JAPAN. Mikiko Shimaoka,
Waseda University
H10
VALUES BASED MISSION VERSUS FOR-PROFIT BUSINESS MODELS:
CEO PERSPECTIVES FROM AUSTRALIAN CHARITIES. Rosemary
Hermans, Swinburne University of Technology
CIVIL SOCIETY AS A PROCESS OF BOUNDARY-MAKING: THEORETICAL
INSIGHTS FROM DEMOCRATIZATION AND MARKET-EXPANSION IN
INDIA. Dolly Daftary, Western Michigan University
WHERE CIVIL SOCIETY FLIRTS WITH THE MARKET: DESIGNING A
CORPORATE VOLUNTEER PROGRAM. Agnes Meinhard, Ryerson
University; Lesley Hustinx, Ghent University; Lonneke Roza,
RSM Erasmus University & Erasmus Centre for Strategic
Philanthropy
Chair:
Tae-kyu Park, Yonsei University
H8
Room E
PANEL: The Challenges of Innovation,
Management and Success in a Global Context
DEFINING DIRECTION WHERE BOUNDARIES BLUR: USING VALUE
PLURALISM TO ADDRESS ECONOMIC STRATEGY. Jenny M. Green,
University of Technology, Sydney; Sarah Kaine, University
of Technology Sydney; Bronwen Dalton, University of
Technology, Sydney
NGO MISSION SUCCESS: THE FIELD OFFICE PERSPECTIVE. Patsy
Kraeger, Arizona State University
WHAT’S IN A NAME? THE MEANING OF ‘HYBRID’ IN HOUSING
ORGANISATIONS IN IRELAND. Mary Lee Rhodes, Trinity College
Dublin; Gemma Donnelly-Cox, Trinity College
HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT IN GERMAN NONPROFITS
–ARE STRATEGIES MISSING? Marlene Walk, University of
Pennsylvania; Femida Handy, University of Pennsylvania;
Heike Schinnenburg, Osnabrueck University
Chair:
James M. Ferris, University of Southern California
REVERSING THE PERSPECTIVE: NGOS MANAGEMENT AS A MATTER
OF SOCIAL INNOVATION. Mihai Lisetchi, The Agency for
Information and Development of NGOs; Nicolae Bibu, Faculty
of Economics and Business Administration (FEAA), West
University; Marian Nastase, Bucharest Academy of Economic
Studies
Chair:
Patsy Kraeger, Arizona State University
Discussant:
Robert F. Ashcraft, Arizona State University
H9
Room C
Civil Society: In Search of the Boundaries
Room B
PANEL: EMES Panel on the Third Sector and
Social Enterprise: Innovations in the European
Research Landscape.
LEARNING AND SOCIAL INNOVATION IN THE THIRD SECTOR. Linda
Lundgaard Andersen, Centre for Social Entrepreneurship,
Roskilde University
EMERGING MODELS OF SOCIAL ENTERPRISE IN EASTERN ASIA: A
CROSS-COUNTRY ANALYSIS. Jacques Defourny, University of
Liege; Shinyang Kim, Civil Society & Welfare Department,
Sungkonghoe University
HYBRIDITY, INNOVATION AND THE THIRD SECTOR- THE COPRODUCTION OF PUBLIC SERVICES. Victor A. Pestoff, ErstsSkondal University College
32
T H U R S DAY , J U LY 12, 2012
H12
Room 3B
5:00 p.m. - 6:30 p.m.
Measuring Civil Society - Diverse Accounts
Parallel Session
CIVIL SOCIETY IN KAZAKHSTAN: DEFINING THE FRAMEWORK OF
TRUST. Tamara G. Nezhina, Independent Sector; Aigerim R.
Ibrayeva, KIMEP
I1
(NOT)-FOR-PROFIT AND SOCIAL ENTERPRISE: SOME UNINTENDED
CONSEQUENCES OF THE BIG SOCIETY? Ciaran Connolly, Author;
Martin Kelly, Queen’s University Management School
MEASURING CIVIL SOCIETY AND VOLUNTEERING: NEW
COMPARATIVE FINDINGS FROM IMPLEMENTATION OF THE UN
NONPROFIT HANDBOOK IN 17 COUNTRIES. Lester M. Salamon,
Center for Civil Society Studies, Johns Hopkins University; S.
Wojciech Sokolowski, Center for Civil Society Studies, Johns
Hopkins University; Megan Haddock, Center for Civil Society
Studies, Johns Hopkins University
RHETORIC OR REALITY? INNOVATION IN ITALIAN SOCIAL
ENTERPRISES. Carlo Borzaga, ISSAN - Istituto Studi Sviluppo;
Sara Depedri, University of Trento; Luca Fazzi, University of
Trento Via Verdi
SOCIAL ENTERPRISES IN BRAZIL: THE AGE OF TRANSITION? Rosa
Maria Fischer, University of Sao Paulo
Chair:
SOCIAL BANKS: FROM THE TRADITIONAL ACTIVITY TO E-SOCIAL
BANKING. Antonio Ariza Montes, ETEA; Carmen LópezMartín, ETEA, University of Cordoba; Alfonso Carlos Morales
Gutiurrez, ETEA; Ana Lucia-Casademunt, ETEA, University
of Cordoba
Pete Alcock, University of Birmingham
Room A
Sustainable Development Programs for Women
Chair:
Hagai A. Katz, Ben Gurion University
INTEGRATING WOMEN INTO DEVELOPMENT THROUGH
MICROENTERPRISE APPROACH IN RURAL AREAS: ROLE OF
MICROFINANCE IN SRI LANKA. Poornima Gayangani Wasana
Jayawardana, Ritsumeikan Asia Pacific University
I2
GLOBAL CLIMATE POLICY COALITIONS – NGOS AND NETWORKS IN
THE GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE POLICY PROCESS. Ian McGregor,
University of Technology, Sydney
Chair:
M. E. Marcela Jimenez de la Jara, Ministerio de
Desarrollo Social
COLLABORATIVE POWER FOR DEVELOPMENT: NGOS AND THE
GOVERNANCE OF DISTRIBUTED ELECTRICITY PROGRAMS IN AFRICA.
Jennifer Brass, School for Public & Environmental Affairs
Room A1
THE IMPORTANCE OF TRUST IN ENVIRONMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS FOR
PROMOTING ENVIRONMENTAL ACTION IN CIVIL SOCIETY. Rosemary
Leonard, University of Western Sydney; Zoe Leviston, CSIRO
Accountability, From Paradox to Performance
ACCOUNTABILITY AND TRANSPARENCY IN THE GERMAN NONPROFITSECTOR: A Paradox? Rabea Hass, Hertie School of
Governance; Annelie Beller, Center for Social Investement,
Heidelberg University
Chair:
Jenny Onyx, University of Technology, Sydney
COMMUNICATING PERFORMANCE IN ANNUAL REPORTS: GOOD
OPPORTUNITY OR CHORE? Joanna Schmidt, Poznan University
of Economics
I3
Room 5
PANEL: The Political Construction of Social
Entrepreneurship, Social Enterprise and Social
Economy – Deliberation, Democracy and
Participation
EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS ON PREFERENCES OF DONORS AND DISCLOSURE
OF ACCOUNTING INFORMATION OF CSOS. Yu Ishida, Akashi
National College of Technology; Hideaki Baba, Aichi Gakusen
University
Chair:
Naoto Yamauchi, Osaka University School of
International Public Policy
Room 4
PANEL: Civil Society Organizations, Climate
Change Politics and Policy – Global, International
and National
WOMEN’S INVOLVEMENT IN MULTIPLE-STAKEHOLDERS DYNAMICS.
A CONCEPTUAL DISCUSSION. Florence Degavre, CERISIS-UCL;
Anna Safuta, CIRTES, Université Catholique de Louvain,
Belgium
H14
Room 2
Social Enterprise at the Crossroad: International
Evidence
DREAMS OF CIVIL SOCIETY TWENTY YEARS AFTER: THE CASE OF
THE CZECH REPUBLIC. Miroslav Pospisil, Centre for Nonprofit
Sector Research, Masaryk University; Jiri Navratil, Masaryk
University
H13
I
THE DISCOURSE OF PARTICIPATION THROUGH SOCIAL
ENTREPRENEURSHIP. Jenny Eschweiler, University of Kent;
Ulrika Levander, Goteborg University
33
T H U R S DAY , J U LY 12, 2012
THE GOVERNANCE OF CROSS-SECTOR PARTNERSHIPS INVOLVING
THIRD SECTOR ORGANIZATIONS. Chris Cornforth, Open
University; Siv Vangen, Open University; John Paul Hayes,
Open University
THE POLITICS OF SOCIAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP. Alex Nicholls,
University of Oxford
FROM SOCIAL ENTERPRISE TO SOCIAL AND SOLIDARITY ECONOMY:
THE ISSUE OF DEMOCRACY. Lars Hulgård, Roskilde University;
Jean-Louis Laville, CRIDA
LA GOUVERNANCE DES ASSOCIATIONS EN FRANCE : ENTRE
MILITANCE ET PROFESSIONNALISATION. Stéphanie ChatelainPonroy, Conservatoire National des Arts et Métiers; Philippe
Eynaud, IAE de Paris, Université Panthéon Sorbonne; Samuel
Sponem, Hec Montréal
Chair:
Lars Hulgård, Roskilde University
I4
Chair:
Wendy Earles, James Cook University
Room 6
SPECIAL SESSION: Peer Reviewing
I7
Bernard Enjolras
Institutt for Samfunnsforskning, Norway and Editor of Voluntas
Market Orientation and/or Marketisation
Debbie Haski-Leventhal
Macquarie Graduate School of Management, Australia
SOCIAL CHANGE, INEQUALITY AND THE MARKETISATION OF
HUMAN SERVICE DELIVERY: IMPLICATIONS FOR THE FUTURE OF THE
THIRD SECTOR IN AUSTRALIA. Ed Carson, University of South
Australia; Lorraine Kerr, Flinders University
Naoto Yamauchi
Osaka University, Japan
UNDERSTANDING THE NONPROFIT “MARKET.” William Brown,
Texas A&M University
Peer review is an important element of quality control and scientific
progress. In this session we focus on reviewing papers that are
submitted for third sector journals. What do editors and authors
expect from reviews? How do editors choose reviewers and how do
editors and authors deal with contradictory advice? And what is in it
for the reviewer? What matters and helps? Participants will also get
the opportunity to exchange their experiences and advice.
THE PROCESS OF MARKETISATION IN HOME CARE AND ITS
CONSEQUENCE ON WELFARE MIX: A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS.
Marthe Nyssens, Universite Catholique de Louvain; Sara
Picchi, Fondazione Brodolini; Annamaria Simonnazzi,
Università degli Studi di Roma “La Sapienza”
Chair:
Annette Zimmer, Münster University,Germany
I5
Chair:
Debbie Haski-Leventhal, Macquarie Graduate School of
Management
Room 7
PANEL: Visions and Forms of Philanthropy: A
Historical Perspective
I8
Room E
Governance, Corruption and Rule of Law
MULTIPLE MEANINGS AND CONCEPTS OF PHILANTHROPY. Rupert
Graf Strachwitz, Maecenata Institute
BEYOND CIVIL SOCIETY - CITIZENSHIP, CIVIC DRIVEN CHANGE
AND GOVERNANCE. Alan F. Fowler, Institute of Social Studies,
Erasmus University
PROFIT AND PHILANTHROPY: SHAREHOLDER COMPANIES AS
PHILANTHROPIC INSTITUTIONS IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY GERMANY.
Thomas Adam, The University of Texas at Arlington
COMBATING CORRUPTION: THE ROLE OF DEMOCRATIZATION NGOS
IN SOUTH AFRICA, TAJIKISTAN AND ARGENTINA. Julie Fisher
Melton, Kettering Foundation
CLASS AND CULTURES OF PHILANTHROPY IN THE UNITED STATES.
Kathleen D. McCarthy, The Graduate Center, CUNY
MAKING ROOM AT THE TABLE: CLAIMING AND RETAINING
INSTITUTIONAL AND NORMATIVE SPACE FOR AFRICAN CIVIL SOCIETY
ORGANIZATIONS THAT PROMOTE RULE OF LAW REFORMS. Jeffery
Brown, Florida A&M University College of Law
Chair:
David Hammack, Case Western Reserve University
I6
Room D
Chair:
Patricia Mendonca, Centro Universitário FEI and
Fundacao Getulio Vargas
Room F
Nonprofit Governance and the Three Sectors: Shifting
Directions, Challenging Dynamics
LATE-MODERN HEGEMONY AND THE CHANGING ROLE OF
VOLUNTARY ASSOCIATIONS IN FINLAND. Martti Siisiäinen,
University Jyväskylä
34
T H U R S DAY , J U LY 12, 2012
I9
I 12
Room B
PANEL: L’économie Solidaire Comme Ancrage
d’innovations Sociales Dans le Développement
des Communautés
Civil Society, Governance and the State
GOVERNMENTALISATION OF THE CIVIL SOCIETY? POWER,
GOVERNANCE AND CIVIL SOCIETY IN GRAMSCI’S AND FOUCAULT’S
ANALYTICS OF POWER. Miikka Pyykkönen, Cultural Policy /
University of Jyväskylä
DES ACTIONS PARTICULIÈRES POUR UN ENJEU GLOBAL. PierreAndre Tremblay, Universite du Quebec a Chicoutimi
LES ANCRAGES TERRITORIAUX DE L’ACTION COLLECTIVE DES
ORGANISMES DU TIERS SECTEUR : RÉFLEXIONS À PARTIR DE
L’EXEMPLE QUÉBÉCOIS. Jacques Caillouette, Universite de
Sherbrooke
MULTI-LEVEL GOVERNANCE: OPPORTUNITIES AND CONSTRAINTS
FOR THE THIRD SECTORS’ ROLE IN SUSTAINING VIABLE SOCIAL
MARKETS. Vanna Gonzales, Arizona State University
¿DEMOCRATIZAR A LA POLICÍA EN MÉXICO? LA PARTICIPACIÓN DE
LA SOCIEDAD CIVIL EN LA TAREA POLICIAL, UNA APROXIMACIÓN
NORMATIVA. Fernando Mora, ITESM-CCM
INTERVENTION DE QUARTIER : ENJEU DE L’INTERFACE ENTRE
ORGANISMES DU TIERS SECTEUR ET SERVICES PUBLICS. Chantal
Doré, Universite de Sherbrooke
Chair:
Patrick Kilby, Australian National University
DE FAIRE UN PROJET, À ÊTRE EN PROJET. Annie Marchand,
Universite de Sherbrooke
Chair:
Pierre-Andre Tremblay, Universite du Quebec a
Chicoutimi
I 10
Room 3B
I 13
Room A
PANEL: Volunteers and Paid Staff Members in Hybrid
Organizations II
Room C
123.
Room C
CO-OPERATION OR CONFLICT? THE ROLE OF CIVIL SOCIETY
ORGANIZATIONS IN FINNISH PUBLIC SERVICE PROVISION –A CASE
STUDY OF PUBLIC-PRIVATE PARTNERSHIPS IN FINNISH DRUG
TREATMENT. Riikka Perälä, University of Helsinki
LES AGENTS DE DÉVELOPPEMENT COMMUNAUTAIRE: ENTRE L’ÉTAT
ET LA SOCIÉTÉ CIVILE. Sebastien Savard, Universito d’Ottawa;
Denis Bourque, Universitat du Quebec en Outaouais
INSTITUTIONAL HYBRIDIZATION VIEWED THROUGH THE SOCIAL
ORIGIN LENS: A QUALITATIVE STUDY ON THE DRIVING FORCES,
ORGANIZATIONAL FEATURES AND THE IMPACT ON VOLUNTEERING IN
FLEMISH TSOS. Jozefien Godemont, University of Ghent
Organizational Framework of NPO Operation
“BIG SOCIETY” – A SOLUTION TO PROBLEMS OF THE STATE AND
VOLUNTARISM? Irene Hardill, Northumbria University;
Michael S. Locke, Volunteering England; Nick Ockenden,
Institute for Volunteering Research
ORGANIZATION STRUCTURE, SERVICE MIX, AND MEMBER
SATISFACTION AND RETENTION. Markus Gmuer, Verbandsmanag
ementinstitut (VMI); Yvonne Ribi, SBK-ASI
THE IMPLICATIONS OF UNDERSTANDING VOLUNTARY INVOLVEMENT
IN THE MANAGEMENT OF FINNISH TRADE UNIONS. Mikko
Laamanen, CERS Centre for Relationship Marketing and
Service Management, Hanken School of Economics
Chairs:
Johan von Essen, Ersta Sköndal Högskola / Uppsala
University
Lesley Hustinx, Ghent University
Chair:
Lucas Meijs, Erasmus University Rotterdam
I 14
I 11
Room A1
Social Enterprises and Social Inclusion: International
Evidenceory and Operational Boundaries
Room 3A
Evaluation From Ideas to Front Lines
Lost in Translation or What’s not included in the Polish Social
Economy. Victor A. Pestoff, Ersta-Skondal University College
MILK AND MEDICINE PROGRAM EVALUATION IN LUSAKA, ZAMBIA:
A MODEL FOR GLOBAL CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY.
Deborah Sturtevant, Hope College
Nonprofit Social Enterprise Activity: Risky Commercialization
or Source of Growth? Kate Cooney, Boston University
OUTCOME MEASUREMENT IN THE THIRD SECTOR: MOVING FROM
PROGRAM TO THE FRONT LINES. Lehn Benjamin, George Mason
University
Colonization of the Markets – How Social Enterprises
Democratize the Business World. Björn Schmitz, University of
Heidelberg - Centre for Social Investment
Chair:
Raymond Dart, Trent University
Work Integration Social Enterprises in Greece: Goals and
Resources. Preliminary Results of an Empirical Investigation
Based on Semi-Structured Interviews. Sofia Adam,
Democritus University of Thrace
35
F R I DAY , J U LY 13, 2012
Carlos Motta, Pontifical Catholic University of Parana – Brazil
F r i d ay, Ju ly 1 3 , 2 0 1 2
INDIGENOUS PEOPLES’ HEALTH CARE: NEW DISCOURSES AND
TECHNOLOGIES OF POLICY AND GOVERNANCE. Judith Dwyer,
Flinders University; Tim Tenbensel, University of Auckland;
Josee Lavoie, University of Northern British Columbia; Jackie
Cumming, Victoria University of Wellington; Amohia Boulton,
Whakauae Research for Health and Development; Angelita
Martini, Flinders University
FRIDAY, JULY, 13
9:00 a.m. - 10:30 a.m.
Parallel Session
J1
J
Room 2
PANEL: Cross-National Philanthropy: TransPacific Perspectives
IDEOLOGY BEING GOVERNED: STRATEGY FORMATION IN CIVIL
SOCIETY. Stefan Lennart Einarsson, Stockholm School of
Economics
CHINESE-AUSTRALIAN DIASPORA PHILANTHROPY. Christopher
Baker, Asia-Pacific Centre for Social Investment &
Philanthropy
Chair:
Gareth G Morgan, Sheffield Hallam University
SHIFTING GEOGRAPHIES OF WEALTH AND GEOGRAPHIES OF
PHILANTHROPY. Michael Moran, Swinburne University of
Technology
J4
Volunteering By and For Youth
LEADERSHIP AND GENDER: AN EMPIRICAL STUDY OF GIVING AND
VOLUNTEERING BY LIONS CLUBS INTERNATIONAL MEMBERS IN
14 COUNTRIES. Debra Mesch, Indiana University - Purdue
University; Una Okonkwo Osili, IUPUI; Xiaonan Kou, The
Center on Philanthropy at Indiana University; Amir Daniel
Hayat, The Center on Philanthropy at Indiana University
CATHOLIC SCOUT ASSOCIATION OF PORTUGAL- MOTIVATIONS
OF ADULT VOLUNTEERS. Boguslawa Sardinha, Polytechnic
Institute of Setobal; Olga Oliveira Cunha, CNE - Catholic
Scout Association of Portugal
YOUTH VOLUNTEERING AND YOUTH DEVELOPMENT: MAPPING
PARTICIPATION OF YOUTH IN THE NATIONAL SERVICE VOLUNTEERS
SCHEME. Archna Kumar, Delhi University; Swati Aggarwal,
University of Delhi; Raina Aggarwal, University of Delhi;
Chander Shekhar Pran, NYKS; Mridula Seth
Chair:
Christopher Baker, Asia-Pacific Centre for Social
Investment & Philanthropy
J2
Room 6
MOTIVATION FOR VOLUNTEERISM IN THE KINGDOM OF SAUDI
ARABIA. Ahmed Bendania, King Fahd University of Petroleum
and Minerals; Salem Ahmed Aldini, King Fahd University of
Petroleum and Minerals
Room 4
Preferences and Motives of Individual Donors
AN EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS ON PREFERENCES AND PRO-SOCIAL
BEHAVIOR: INTERNATIONAL COMPARATIVE STUDY ON INDIVIDUAL
PHILANTHROPY. Naoko Okuyama, Osaka University
Chair:
Nancy T. Kinney, University of Missouri - St. Louis
FACTORS EXPLAINING INDIVIDUALS’ DECISION TO DONATE TO
A CERTAIN CHARITABLE CAUSE. Michael Neumayr, Vienna
University of Economics; Michael Meyer, University of
Economics, Vienna
J5
Mobilizing and Governing the Grassroots
WHO GIVES TO ASSOCIATIONS AND WHY? Lili Wang, Arizona
State University; Robert F. Ashcraft, Arizona State University
A RESEARCH ON GRASSROOTS SOCIAL GOVERNANCE MODE
BASED ON MULTI--COOPERATION-TAKE WU XI COUNTY IN
CHONGQING(CHINA)AS AN EXAMPLE. YANG Li, NGO Research
Center of Tsinghua University
Chair:
Rupert Graf Strachwitz, Maecenata Institute
J3
Room 7
GRASSROOTS NGOS IN CHINA: FILLING IN THE LANDSCAPE.
Anthony Spires, Chinese University of Hong Kong; Lin Tao,
The Chinese University of Hong Kong; Kin-man Chan, The
Chinese University of Hong Kong
Room 5
Nonprofit Governance: Different Contexts and
Perspectives
MOBILIZING COMMUNITY RESOURCES TO ADDRESS HIV/AIDS
IN NORTHERN BRITISH COLUMBIA: A REVIEW. Jamie Reschny,
University of Northern British Columbia
HUMANIZATION STRATEGIES AT BRAZILIAN HOSPITALS: TWO SIDES
OF THE SAME COIN. Lucilaine Pascuci, Pontifical Catholic
University of Parana; Victor Meyer Jr., Pontifical Catholic
University of Parana; J. Patrick Murphy, DePaul University;
Chair:
Adalbert Evers, Universitat Giessen
36
F R I DAY , J U LY 13, 2012
J6
A THIRD SECTOR ORGANISATION SHAPING THE AGENDA
OF PERSONALISATION: AN ANALYSIS AND CRITIQUE OF THE
DEVELOPMENT AND IMPACT OF IN CONTROL. Alex Murdock,
London South Bank University
Room F
State and Civil Society - Transcending and
Transforming an Age-Old Disunity?
CIVIL SOCIETY AS A PROCESS OF BOUNDARY-MAKING:
THEORETICAL INSIGHTS FROM CONTEXTS OF DEMOCRATIZATION
AND MARKET-EXPANSION. Dolly Daftary, Western Michigan
University
THE ROLE OF THE THIRD SECTOR IN SOCIAL CAPITAL ENHANCEMENT
AND MOBILISATION: EVIDENCE FROM AN ETHNOGRAPHIC STUDY.
Martin Webber, Kings College London
MUNICIPALITY MECHANISMS TO PROMOTE LOCAL PARTICIPATION:
MARGINALIZED GROUPS CASE. Emma Juaneda Ayensa,
University of La Rioja; Carmen Marcuello Servas,
Universidad de Zaragoza
Chair:
Alex Murdock, London South Bank University
J9
TRANSFORMING AN AFRICAN STATE: THE POWER AND LIMITS OF
SOCIAL MOVEMENTS IN COUNTER-HEGEMONIC CONSTITUTIONAL
REFORM STRUGGLES IN KENYA (1990-2010). Jacob M. Mati,
University of the Witwatersrand
PANEL: Civil Society Organizations, Climate
Change and Sustainability - Local Politics and
Policy
SOCIETAL CONDITIONS OF LOCAL CORPORATISM: A SURVEY OF
CHINA’S NGO AND LOCAL GOVERNANCE. Qiang Wu, University
of Duisburg-Essen
Chair:
Luiz Carlos Merege, IATS - Institute for Third Sector
Management
J7
PRIVATE COMPANY MANAGERS AND EMPLOYEES AND THIRD SECTOR
ORGANIZATION MEMBERS INTERACTING: SOLID WASTE AS A THEME
AND A PROBLEM. Marcos Bidart de Novaes, Universidade
Presbiteriana Mackenzie
Room D
Strategies for Enhancing the Capacity of Civil
Society Actors
THE IMPORTANCE OF CONTEXT: RELOCALISATION AND THE
TRANSITION NETWORK. Clare Power, University of Western
Sydney
LEARNING PROCESSES BUILDING STRONGER CIVIL SOCIETY:
UNIVERSITY-COMMUNITY PARTNERSHIP RESEARCH FINDINGS.
Marjorie Mayo, University of London; Zoraida MendiwelsoBendek, University of Lincoln; Carol Packham, Manchester
Metropolitan University
Chair:
Ian McGregor, University of Technology, Sydney
MEDIA ADVOCACY, PROFESSIONALISM AND ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES.
Dasegowdanakoplu Poornananda, Kuvempu University
J10
Room C
“The Best Practice” Experiments of NPOs
THE IMPORTANCE OF CHANGES IN ORGANIZATIONAL FORM FOR THE
ROLE OF THE VOLUNTARY SECTOR IN SCANDINAVIA. Per Selle,
University of Bergen; Åsta Dyrnes Nordø, Centre for Research
on Civil Society and Voluntary Sector; Kristin Strømsnes,
University of Bergen; Dag Wollebaek, University of Bergen
AGENCY PROBLEMS IN NONPROFIT NURSING HOMES: A DISCRETE
CHOICE EXPERIMENT. Stijn Van Puyvelde, Vrije Universiteit
Brussels; Ralf Caers, Vrije Universiteit Brussles; Cindy
Du Bois, Vrije Universiteit Brussels; Marc Jegers, Vrije
Universiteit Brussels
FROM WELFARE STATE TO WELFARE PLURALISM – ATTITUDES AND
EXPECTATIONS OF FINNS TOWARDS A CHANGING WELFARE MODEL.
Henrietta Gronlund, University of Helsinki; Anne Birgitta
Pessi, University of Helsinki
ORGANIZATIONAL AND FUNDRAISING PRACTICE IN MATURED
NONPROFIT ORGANIZATIONS. Luz Mairym Lopez-Rodriguez,
Puerto Rico Institute of Statistics
THE MARKETING ORIENTATION OF AUSTRALIAN NON–PROFIT
SMES: EXPLORATORY FINDINGS. Simon Wilde, Southern Cross
University; Kate Neale, Southern Cross Business School,
Southern Cross University; Patrick Gillett, Southern Cross
University
Chair:
Lester M. Salamon, Center for Civil Society Studies,
Johns Hopkins University
J8
Room B
Room E
Chair:
James Allen Smith, Rockefeller Archive Center
PANEL: Policy on Personalisation, User
Empowerment, the Market and the Third Sector
PERSONALISATION AND MARKETISATION: POLICY CONSTRUCTION
AND PRACTICE IMPLEMENTATION – IMPLICATIONS FOR THIRD SECTOR
PROVISION OF ADULT SOCIAL CARE AND SUPPORT. Sarah Carr,
Social Care Institute for Excellence
37
F R I DAY , J U LY 13, 2012
J11
Room 3A
UNDERSTANDING DIFFUSE STAKEHOLDER EXPECTATIONS FOR
MANAGING LEGITIMACY. A (RE-)CONSTRUCTION OF STAKEHOLDERS’
CONCEPTIONS OF THE PUBLIC VALUE(S) OF AUSTRIAN FEDERAL
MUSEUMS. Monika Knassmueller, WU Vienna; Dennis
Jancsary, WU Vienna
PANEL: Social Enterprises: An Organizational
Perspective
CONCEPTIONS OF SOCIAL ENTERPRISE AND SOCIAL
ENTREPRENEURSHIP IN EUROPE AND THE UNITED STATES:
CONVERGENCES AND DIVERGENCES. Jacques Defourny,
University of Liege; Marthe Nyssens, Universite Catholique de
Louvain
Chair:
Susan D. Phillips, Carleton University
J14
THE STATE OF THEORY AND RESEARCH ON SOCIAL ENTERPRISES.
Dennis R. Young, Andrew Young School of Policy Studies,
Georgia State University
Room A1
Community Integration and the Adding of Public
Value
A COMPARATIVE CASE STUDY OF WORK INTEGRATION SOCIAL
ENTERPRISES. Eve Garrow, University of California, Los
Angeles; Yeheskel Hasenfeld, UCLA
COMMUNITY VARIATION IN NONPROFIT SECTORS: WHAT
DIFFERENCE DOES IT MAKE? Lindsey McDougle, University of
Pennsylvania
Chairs:
Benjamin Gidron, Israeli Social Enterprise Research
Center (ISERC), Beit Berl Academic College
Yeheskel Hasenfeld, UCLA
NON PROFIT ORGANIZATIONS AND PUBLIC VALUE CREATION: A
LITERATURE REVIEW AND WHAT FORTH? Filippo Giordano,
University of Siena; Riccardo Mussari, Universita Degli Studi
di Siena
J12
ISOLATING AND INTEGRATING?! - THE ASSOCIATION OF LATIN
AMERICAN IMMIGRANTS IN ISRAEL. Deby Babis, Hebrew
University in Jerusalem
Room 3B
Strategies to Increase Fundraising Success
Chair:
Antonin Wagner, New School
EVALUATING MARKETING STRATEGIES IN THE THIRD SECTOR: THE
EFFECTS OF DONOR PRIORITIZATION STRATEGY ON SATISFACTION,
LOYALTY AND INTENTION TO UPGRADE. Silke Boenigk, University
of Hamburg; Christian Scherhag, University of Hamburg
11:00 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.
SOCIAL NETWORKS AND PHILANTHROPY: THE IMPACT OF BOARD
NETWORK STRUCTURES ON NONPROFIT GRANT SUCCESS. Lewis
Faulk, American University; Jurgen Willems, Free University
Brussels; Jasmine McGinnis, Georgia State University and
Georgia Institute of Technology; Amanda Janis, American
University, School of Public Affairs
Parallel Session
K1
Room 2
National and Global Perspectives on Giving and
Volunteering
THE IMPACT OF NEW MEDIA ON CHINA’S PHILANTHROPY: A CASE
STUDY OF “FREE LUNCH FOR CHILDREN” PROJECT. Qihai Cai,
Chinese University of Hong Kong
INDIVIDUAL GIVING AND VOLUNTEERING IN MEXICO: TOWARDS
A CIVIL SOCIETY RESEARCH AGENDA. Jacqueline Butcher de
Rivas, CIESC, A.C.
Chair:
Georg von Schnurbein, University of Basel
J13
K
IS THERE A BRITISH “CIVIC CORE”? EVIDENCE FROM THE
CITIZENSHIP SURVEY. John Mohan, Third Sector Research
Centre; Sarah Bulloch, University of Southampton
Room A
UNV’S 2011 STATE OF THE WORLD’S VOLUNTEERISM REPORT:
UNIVERSAL VALUES FOR GLOBAL WELL-BEING. Mae Chao,
United Nations Volunteers (UNV) Programme; Robert Leigh,
United Nations Volunteers; Rajesh Tandon, Society for
Participatory Research in Asia (PRIA); Anabel Cruz, Instituto
de Comunicacion y Desarrollo (ICD)
Legitimacy, Efficiency and Participation in
Governance
IS CIVIL SOCIETY PARTICIPATION IN LOCAL POLICY MAKING
HARMING ADMINISTRATIVE EFFICIENCY? Matthias Freise,
University of Muenster
BRITAIN’S BIG SOCIETY FROM A COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE: AN
OLD DEBATE ABOUT NEW VOLUNTEERISM. Markus Ketola,
London School of Economic
ROLES AND SOURCES FOR LEGITIMACY OF NONPROFIT
ORGANIZATIONS PARTICIPATING IN COMMUNITY GOVERNANCE:
ANALYSIS OF A LOCAL COOPERATION NETWORK. Ana Isabel Do
Rego Felgueiras, Universidade da Coruña; Marta Rey Garcia,
Universidade da Coruna; Luis Ignacio Alvarez Gonzalez,
University of Oviedo
Chair:
Lesley Hustinx, Ghent University
38
F R I DAY , J U LY 13, 2012
K3
Room 5
Brussels; Tim Vantilborgh, Vrije Universiteit Brussel; Jemima
Bidee, Vrije Universiteit Brussel; Roland Pepermans, Vrije
Universiteit Brussels
Philanthropy and Volunteering
DO FORMAL VOLUNTEERING AND STATE WELFARE SERVICES
“CROWD OUT” INFORMAL HELPING? AN INTERNATIONAL
COMPARATIVE STUDY. Christopher J. Einolf, DePaul University
LEADING FOR IMPACT IN THE GREEK NONPROFIT SECTOR: THE
EMERGING ROLE OF NONPROFIT LEADERSHIP BRAND. Christina
Giannopoulou, Athens University of Economics and Business;
Anthony Ioannidis, Athens University of Economics and
Business
OPENING THE BLACKBOX: RELIGIOUS PARTICIPATION AS A GATEWAY
TO COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT THROUGH PHILANTHROPY AND
VOLUNTEERING. Mary Tschirhart, North Carolina State
University; Laurie Paarlberg, University of North Carolina
Wilmington; Richard Clerkin, North Carolina State University;
Robert Christensen, University of Georgia; Darlene
Rodriguez, UNC-Greensboro
Chair:
Samiul Hasan, United Arab Emirates University
K6
Room F
TRANSPLANTED PHILANTHROPY: WHY AFRICAN COMMUNITY
FOUNDATIONS CANNOT BLOOM WHERE THEY HAVE BEEN PLANTED.
Christiana Atibil, The Center on Philanthropy at IU
Myth or Values? Critical Inquiry into the Values of
Civil Society
Muslim Philanthropy and Social Security in Southeast Asia II.
Janice L. H. Nga, Universiti Malaysia Sabah
ALTRUISM AND CIVIC ENGAGEMENT: THE PROMISE OF CIVIL
SOCIETY FOR DEMOCRACY. William W. Clohesy, University of
Northern Iowa
Chair:
Catherina Pharoah, Sir John Cass Business School
MONEY, MISSION OR NEED: HOW DO UGANDAN NGOS CHOOSE
ACTIVITIES? Amit Grover; Ronelle Burger, Nottingham
University and Stellenbosch University; Trudy Owens,
Nottingham University
K4
Room 6
MYTHOGRAPHIC AND LINGUISTIC EVIDENCE FOR RELIGIOUS GIVING
AMONG GRAECO-ARYANS DURING THE CHALCOLITHIC AGE (C.3RD
MILLENNIUM BCE). Marty Sulek, Indiana University
The Logic of Giving in an International Perspective
LOS VALORES DEL ACTO DE DONAR: OBJETIVOS Y MOTIVACIONES
DE LOS DONANTES. Isa Mara Espina Mesquita, Fundacao
Armando Alvares Penteado (FAAP); Eloisa Helena De Souza
Cabral, Fundacao Armando Alvares Penteado (FAAP);
Juliane Silva Damasceno, Universidade Federal de Minas
Gerais; Paulo de Tarso Muzy, Fundacao Armando Alvares
Penteado (FAAP)
FROM EMOTION TO TRUST - THE REASONS BEHIND, AND
CONSEQUENCES OF, ENDING A SMALL DEVELOPMENT AGENCY.
Lau Schulpen, CIDIN, Radboud University Nijmegen; Sara
Kinsbergen, Centre for International Development
Chair:
Alan F. Fowler, Institute of Social Studies, Erasmus
University
PATTERNS, MOTIVES, AND OBSTACLES TOWARD GIVING IN
TRANSITION ECONOMIES: THE EXAMPLE OF KAZAKHSTAN. Aigerim
R. Ibrayeva, KIMEP; Tamara G. Nezhina, Independent Sector
K7
LOGIC OF ACTION IN THE CATHOLIC FIELD - DIVERSITY OF MODELS
AND PRACTICES IN THE FIELD OF SOCIAL SERVICES. Henrique
Joaquim, Universidade Católica Portuguesa
Room D
PANEL: The Emerging System of Development
Cooperation in the South: New Ideas and Interventions?
Chair:
Pamala Wiepking, Erasmus Centre for Strategic
Philanthropy, Erasmus University Rotterdam
Nationalization and Mergers of International CSOs in Brazil:
the Case of the ABRINQ / Save the Children Foundation.
Patricia Mendonca, Centro Universitário FEI and Fundacao
Getulio Vargas; Rui Mesquita Cordeiro, FGV-SP
K5
Once Recipients, Now Donors: Brazilian Multinationals and
International Corporate Philanthropy. Fernando Nogueira,
Fundação Getúlio Vargas - São Paulo; José Eduardo Breda
Júnior, ESPM - Escola Superior de Propaganda e Marketing;
Loic Okretic, ESPM - Escola Superior de Propaganda e
Marketing; Otávio Carvalho, ESPM - Escola Superior de
Propaganda e Marketing
Room 7
Nonprofit Organisations: Leadership, Coalitions, and
Impacts
BASES OF POWER AND THE DOMINANT COALITION IN NONPROFIT
ORGANIZATIONS. David Renz, University of Missouri - Kansas
City; Fredrik O. Andersson, University of Missouri, Kansas
City
Internationalization Strategies of NGOS: A Multi-Method
Study. Fernando Ruiz
COMPETENCE SPECIALIZATION IN NONPROFIT LEADERSHIP TEAMS.
Jurgen Willems, Free University Brussels; Gert Huybrechts,
Vrije Universiteit Brussel; Marc Jegers, Vrije Universiteit
Chairs:
Patricia Mendonca, Centro Universitário FEI and
39
F R I DAY , J U LY 13, 2012
Fundacao Getulio Vargas
Fernando Nogueira, Fundação Getúlio Vargas - São Paulo
K8
UNIVERSITY-BASED EDUCATION PROGRAMS IN NONPROFIT AND
PHILANTHROPIC STUDIES: PROGRAMS IN THE UNITED STATES.
Roseanne M. Mirabella, Seton Hall University
Room E
Chair:
Roseanne M. Mirabella, Seton Hall University
Discussant:
Jenny Onyx, University of Technology, Sydney
“Money Makes the World Go Round”: Taxation
of and Public Funding for Nonprofits
TAX INCENTIVES TO CORPORATIONS’ DONATIONS ON NON-PROFIT
ORGANIZATIONS IN KOREA: IS THE DEDUCTION LIMIT EFFECTIVE?
Wonik Son, Korea Institute of Public Finance
K11
Room 3A
Social Capital
THEORETICAL MODEL OF NPO´S PUBLIC FUNDING ACCORDING OF
THE REASON OF THEIR FUNDING. Zuzana Prouzova, Masaryk
University
SOCIAL CAPITAL AND CHILD HEALTH STATUS: CROSS-COUNTRY
EVIDENCE. Kanako Yoshikawa, Osaka School of International
Public Policy, Osaka University; Naoto Yamauchi, Osaka
University School of International Public Policy
LAW, POLICY AND POLITICS IN AUSTRALIA’S RECENT NOT-FORPROFIT SECTOR REFORMS. Ann O’Connell, Melbourne Law
School, University of Melbourne; Fiona Martin, University of
New South Wales; Joyce Chia, University of Melbourne
SOCIAL CAPITAL IN THE CREATION OF SOCIAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP.
Matsunaga Yoshiho, Osaka University of Commerce
Chair:
Alejandro Natal, El Colegio Mexiquense
“RURAL COMMUNITY REVITALIZATION SOCIAL ENTERPRISE” AND
SOCIAL CAPITAL OF RURAL COMMUNITY. Masanari Sakurai,
Ritsumeikan University
K9
THE DEVELOPMENT OF SOCIAL ENTERPRISE OF AN INDIGENOUS
VILLAGE IN TAIWAN: INTERTWINED WITH SOCIAL POLICY, CULTURE
AND SOCIAL CAPITAL. Lu-Yi Hsieh, Chang Jung Christian
University
Room B
Building Partnership with Business Sector
PRIVATE COMPANY MANAGERS AND EMPLOYEES AND THIRD SECTOR
ORGANIZATION MEMBERS INTERACTING: SOLID WASTE AS A THEME
AND A PROBLEM. Marcos Bidart de Novaes, Universidade
Presbiteriana Mackenzie
Chair:
Giulio Ecchia, University of Bologna
MANAGEMENT AND ORGANIZATION OF THE PARTNERSHIP BETWEEN
NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATIONS, SOCIAL ENTERPRISES AND FIRMS:
AN EMPIRICAL STUDY. Federica Bandini, Università Bologna;
Alessia Anzivino, SDA Bocconi
K12
Social Entrepreneurship: Charities and
Philanthropy
CAUSE-RELATED MARKETING IN THE USA: A QUANTITATIVE STUDY
EXAMINING NONPROFIT AND BUSINESS ALLIANCE RELATIONSHIPS.
Debra Basil, University of Lethbridge; Mary Runte, University
of Lethbridge; Sameer Deshpande, University of Lethbridge
A MARRIAGE MADE IN HEAVEN? A PRELIMINARY ANALYSIS ON
THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN VENTURE PHILANTHROPY AND SOCIAL
ENTREPRENEURSHIP. Qihai Cai, Chinese University of Hong
Kong
Chair:
Hilary Yerbury, University of Technology Sydney
K10
Room 3B
CHARITIES AND SOCIAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP. Roger Spear, Open
University
SOCIAL GENEROSITY TO PUBLIC BENEFIT ORGANIZATIONS IN POLAND
– RISKS AND OPPORTUNITIES. Krystyna Kietlinska, University
of Lodz
Room C
PANEL: Rethinking Education for Civil Society
Leaders: Regional Perspectives on Where We
Are and Where We Are Going
Chair:
Victor A. Pestoff, Ersta-Skondal University College
UNIVERSITY-BASED NONPROFIT EDUCATION PROGRAMS IN CHINA:
AN OVERVIEW AND ASSESSMENT. Chao Guo, Arizona State
University; Zhibin Zhang, Nanyang Technological University
K13
NONPROFIT MANAGEMENT EDUCATION: NORTHERN EUROPEAN
AND NORDIC PERSPECTIVES. Johan Hvenmark, Ersta Skondal
University College; Ola Segnestam Larsson, Ersta Skondal
University College
Room A
Tensions in Evaluation of Nonprofits
An Empirical Study on the Foundation-NPO Relationship
in a Trilateral Evaluation Situation. Rafael Wyser, Centre
for Philanthropy Studies, University of Basel; Georg von
Schnurbein, University of Basel
40
F R I DAY , J U LY 13, 2012
L2
Building Capacity? Monitoring and Evaluation in Cambodian
NGOs. David Suarez, University of Southern California;
Jeffery Marshall, Sapere Development Solutions
PANEL: Government-Voluntary Sector Compacts
in an International Perspective
Ethical tensions in International Development Planning and
Evaluation: Lessons in INGO management from Eastern
Congo. Ramya Ramanath, DePaul University
SURVIVING OVER TIME AND SPACE? THE EXPERIENCE OF THE
ENGLISH COMPACT. Marilyn E. Taylor, University of the West of
England
Chair:
Carolyn Cordery, Victoria University of Wellington
K14
REGULATING GOVERNMENT-CIVIL SOCIETY RELATIONS IN
AUSTRALIA: LESSONS FOR THE AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL COMPACT
FROM INTER-SECTORAL FRAMEWORK AGREEMENTS IN OTHER
JURISDICTIONS. John Butcher, Australian National University;
John Casey, City University of New York; Bronwen Dalton,
University of Technology, Sydney
Room A1
Context and Interorganizational Relations
FROM A LIBERAL TO A SOCIAL DEMOCRATIC WELFARE STATE: THE
TRANSLATION OF THE UK COMPACT INTO THE SWEDISH CONTEXT.
Hakan Johansson, Lund University; Mairon Johansson,
Malmö University
NOTES ON THE THEORY OF ASSOCIATIONS. Cristina Puga,
Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México
Third Sector Organisations in Hypercomplex Societies: A
Systems-Theoretical Approach to the Third Sector. Silvia
Ferreira, Lancaster University (UK) / Universidade de
Coimbra (Portugal)
GOVERNMENT-VOLUNTARY SECTOR COMPACTS: THE INTERNATIONAL
OUTLOOK. Marta Reuter, Stockholm University; Filip
Wijkstrom, Stockholm School of Economics; Johan von Essen,
Ersta Sköndal Högskola / Uppsala University
ASPECTOS NORMATIVOS E IMPLEMENTACIÓN DE LA TEORÍA DEL
TERCER SECTOR: UN BREVE RECUENTO ANALÍTICO. Humberto
Muñoz Grandé, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México
Chair:
Marta Reuter, Stockholm University
Discussant:
Steven Rathgeb Smith, University of Washington
Chair:
Triparna Vasavada, Penn State University
L3
L1
Room 5
PANEL: Tools for Social Innovation? Comparative
Perspectives to Fostering Social Entrepreneurship
and the Social Economy
2:00 p.m. - 3:30 p.m.
Parallel Session
Room 4
L
GOVERNMENT MAPPING OF THE THIRD SECTOR: FOSTERING OR
HINDERING SOCIAL INNOVATION? Susan Appe, University at
Albany, SUNY
Room 2
Generating Trust, Building Social Capital
THE HUB EXPERIENCE AND SOCIAL INNOVATION IN SICILY: THE
THIRD SECTOR AND ITS ROLE IN DEMOCRATIZING THE ECONOMY.
Maria Olivella Rizza, University of Catania
BONDING AND BRIDGING SOCIAL CAPITAL WITH FORMAL AND
INFORMAL CAREERS IN SWEDEN AND AUSTRALIA. Rosemary
Leonard, University of Western Sydney; Stina Johansson,
Umeå University; Debbie Horsfall, University of Western
Sydney
THE ROLE OF PHILANTHROPIC FOUNDATIONS IN SUPPORTING SOCIAL
INNOVATIONS. Steffen Bethmann, University Basel
Chair:
Susan Appe, University at Albany, SUNY
Discussant:
Andrea Bassi, University of Bologna
THE IMPORTANCE OF TRUST IN ENVIRONMENTAL ORGANISATIONS
FOR PROMOTING ENVIRONMENTAL ACTION IN CIVIL SOCIETY.
Rosemary Leonard, University of Western Sydney; Zoe
Leviston, CSIRO
COMPARING ETHNIC AND MULTICULTURAL IMMIGRANT SERVICE
ORGANIZATIONS IN CANADA: BONDING AND BRIDGING. Ida E.
Berger, Ryerson University; Katia G. Melnik Olive, LEST
University Aix-Marseille 2, Center for Employ; Mary K.
Foster, Ryerson University
L4
Room 6
Volunteer Transitions and Experiences
HOW QUALITY OF MOTIVATION AND NEED SATISFACTION INFLUENCE
VOLUNTEERS’ INTEREST/ENJOYMENT AND MOOD DURING
VOLUNTEER ACTIVITIES: A DAILY-DIARY STUDY. Jemima Bidee,
Vrije Universiteit Brussel; Tim Vantilborgh, Vrije Universiteit
Brussel; Roland Pepermans, Vrije Universiteit Brussels; Gert
Chair:
Lev Jakobson, National Research University Higher
School of Economics (Moscow)
41
F R I DAY , J U LY 13, 201
L7
Huybrechts, Vrije Universiteit Brussel; Jurgen Willems, Free
University Brussels; Marc Jegers, Vrije Universiteit Brussels
Room D
Volunteering By and Care For Older People
MOTIVATIONS WHICH INFLUENCE VOLUNTEERS’ SATISFACTION.
Marisa Ferreira, ESTGF - IPP & FEP-UP; Teresa Proença,
FEP-UP; João F. Proença, FEP-UP
VOLUNTEERING WITH VITALITY: LIFELONG SKILL USAGE AND
LEARNING. Suzanne L. Cook, Baycrest
HAPPY TO SERVE: VOLUNTEER MANAGEMENT AND JOB
SATISFACTION. Debbie Haski-Leventhal, Macquarie Graduate
School of Management; Kate Hughes, Macquarie Graduate
School of Management; Lesley Hustinx, Ghent University;
Femida Handy, University of Pennsylvania
SOCIAL TIES AND VOLUNTEERING IN LATER LIFE: A MIXED
METHODS APPROACH. Sarah Dury, Vrije Universiteit Brussel;
Tine Buffel, Vrije Universiteit Brussel; Liesbeth De Donder,
Vrije Universiteit Brussel; Nico De Witte, University College
Ghent; Dominique,Verte Vrije Universiteit Brussel
LONG-TERM CARE FOR ELDERLY PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES:
A SOCIAL CHALLENGE FOR INSTITUTIONS AND VOLUNTARY
ASSOCIATIONS. AN EMPIRICAL STUDY. Elena Elia, Qubica soc.
coop a r.l.; Paola Tola, Qubica coop a r.l.; Simona Carboni,
Fondazione Volontariato e Partecipazione; Riccardo Guidi,
Fondazione Volontariato e Partecipazione
Chair:
Megan Alessandrini, University of Tasmania
L5
Room 7
Perspectives on Civic Participation and
Engagement
Chair:
Roseanne M. Mirabella, Seton Hall University
CIVIC ATTITUDES AND ASSOCIATIONAL ACTIVENESS OF SECONDLEVEL STUDENTS IN 38 COUNTRIES: COMPARISON AND THEORETICAL
INTERPRETATION OF FINDINGS. Tomi Kankainen, University of
Jyväskylä; Martti Siisiäinen, University of Jyväskylä
L8
Diversity: Value for NPOs
NEW SPACES FOR CIVIC PARTICIPATION IN LITHUANIA:
OPPORTUNITIES FOR AND INTEREST IN E-PARTICIPATION. Egle
Butkeviciene, Kaunas University of Technology; Egle
Vaidelyte, Kaunas University of Technology
DILEMMAS OF DIVERSITY MANAGEMENT IN THE VOLUNTARY
SECTOR. Christina Schwabenland, London Metropolitan
University
SOCIAL ENTERPRISE, LOCALISM AND CIVIC PARTICIPATION– A
PSYCHOSOCIAL PERSPECTIVE. Lynn Froggett, University of
Central Lancashire
DIVERSITY AND EQUALITY: COEXISTENCE AND CONTRADICTIONS.
Judith Weisinger, New Mexico State University
INDEPENDENT OR COLLABORATIVE? AN EMPIRICAL INVESTIGATION
OF NGOS’ PARTICIPATION IN THE WENCHUAN EARTHQUAKE.
Qiushi Liu, Tsinghua University; Xiuping Zhou, Tsinghua
University
Chair:
Julie Fisher Melton, Kettering Foundation
L6
Room E
Chair:
Michael Meyer, University of Economics, Vienna
Room F
“Times are Changing!” La France and its Third
Sector
L9
Room B
EUROPEAN CIVIL SOCIETIES COMPARED. Annette Zimmer, Münster
University; Edith J. Archambault, Universite de Paris I Sorbonne
PANEL: Utilizing the CIVICUS Civil Society Index
Data: Applying Different Methodologies to Third
Sector Research
PUBLIC FUNDS AS SOURCE OF REVENUE FOR FRENCH NONPROFIT
SECTOR: ASSESSMENTS, EVOLUTIONS AND PERSPECTIVES. Lionel
Prouteau, Laboratoire d’économie et de Management de
Nantes; Viviane Tchernonog, CNRS/Universita Paris Sorbonne
PAVING WAY TO THE LGBTT RIGHTS: DOMESTIC OR
INTERNATIONAL DYNAMICS? Koray Kaplica, Koç University;
Ugur Yıldız, Koç University
TERRITORIAL CO-CONSTRUCTION’S ROLE AND PLACE OF THIRD
SECTOR IN FRANCE. Emmanuel Bioteau, ESO Anger; Pascal
Glemain, ESSCA
TESTING THE CIVIL SOCIETY ARGUMENT: DOES STRONGER CIVIL
SOCIETY LEAD TO LESS CORRUPTION AND A BETTER DEMOCRACY?
Aydin Gunduz, Koç University
TRACING THE BOOMERANG PATTERN IN TURKEY. DAMLA BAYRAKTAR
Aksel, Koç University
Chair:
Kathy Brock, Queen’s University
FROM TRANSITION TO TURNING POINT: TRACING CIVIL SOCIETY
DEVELOPMENT IN TURKEY. Didem Cakmakli, Koç University
Chair:
Ahmet Icduygu, Koç University
42
F R I DAY , J U LY 13, 2012
Discussant:
Zeynep Meydanoglu, Ashoka Turkey
FORMALIZING SERVICE-LEARNING IN GRADUATE LEVEL STUDY
ABROAD AND DOMESTIC COURSES. Heather Carpenter, Grand
Valley State University
L10
Chair:
Heather Carpenter, Grand Valley State University
Room C
Social Entrepreneurship: Defining an Emerging
Field
L13
FIVE STAGES OF SOCIAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP. Yutaka Tanabe,
Tokyo Institute of Technology
Social Marketing and the Marketization of
Service Delivery
INTERSECTIONALITY AND EMPOWERMENT IN THE EMERGING FIELD
OF SOCIAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP. Malin Gawell, Entrepreneurship
and Small Business Research Institute
A CRITICAL CASE STUDY OF CAUSE-RELATED MARKETING IN THE
U.S. Angela Eikenberry, University of Nebraska at Omaha
DEFINING SOCIAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP: LESSONS FROM PORTUGUESE
ORGANIZATIONAL DYNAMICS. Cristina Parente, Universidade
do Porto; Alexandra Lopes, University of Porto - Sociology
Institute of FLUP; Neusa Vanessa Marcos, University of Porto
- Sociology Institute of FLUP
MICRO-GIVING IN FRANCE. INNOVATIVE MECHANISMS FOR NEW
OPPORTUNITIES WORLDWIDE. Edith Bruder, Centre d’Etude et de
rechreche sur la Philanthropi
‘AUTO-MANAGEMENT’, AN EMERGING PRACTICE THEORY,
ADDRESSES THE LIMIT-SITUATIONS OF MARKETISATION IN HUMAN
SERVICES DELIVERY. Susan Huhana Mlcek, Charles Sturt
University
Chair:
Gloria Estapa Dubreuil, Universitat Autònoma de
Barcelona
L11
BRANDING IN THE NPO CULTURAL SECTOR. Gesa Birnkraut,
University of Applied Sciences Osnabrueck
Room 3A
Chair:
Ruth Phillips, University of Sydney
Contexts in Measuring Impact
MUTUALISTIC AND SOCIAL EFFICIENCY OF ITALIAN COOPERATIVE
BANKS: AN EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS. Luca Bagnoli, University of
Florence; Giacomo Manetti, University of Florence
L14
Room A1
Social Economy and Local Development:
International Evidence
RE-EVALUATION OF OVERHEAD AND FUNDRAISING EFFICIENCY
MEASURES: THE ROLE OF SIZE, AGE, AND SUBSECTOR. Patrick
Rooney, Center on Philanthropy at Indiana University; Thomas
Pollak, Center on Nonprofits and Philanthropy, The Urban
Institute; Michal Kramarek, The Center on Philanthropy at
Indiana University; Hager Mark, Arizona State University
Business Ventures by NPOs and Social Businesses - Different
Forms of Hybrid Organizations Combining Social and
Business Goals: Some Insights from a Survey in Israel. Inbal
Abbou, Israeli Social Enterprise Research Center (ISERC);
Benjamin Gidron, Israeli Social Enterprise Research Center
(ISERC), Beit Berl Academic College
VALUES AND PUBLIC SPACE IN THE IMPACT EVALUATION OF WORLD
HERITAGE: AN INVENTORY OF VALUES. Eloisa Helena De Souza
Cabral, Fundacao Armando Alvares Penteado (FAAP); Luis
Antonio Eguinoa, Fundacao Clovis Salgado; Paulo de Tarso
Muzy, Fundacao Armando Alvares Penteado (FAAP)
Spatial Determinants of the Creation of Worker Cooperative
Societies: a Comparative Perspective. Millan Diaz Foncea,
Universidad de Zaragoza; Carmen Marcuello Servas,
Universidad de Zaragoza
Chair:
Jenny Onyx, University of Technology, Sydney
L12
Room A
Chair:
Rachel Laforest, Queen’s University
Room 3B
PANEL: Study Abroad for Graduate Students
Enrolled in US-Based Academic Programs:
Experiences, Issues, and Best Practices
FIVE MODELS OF STUDY ABROAD PROGRAMS IN MORE THAN TEN
COUNTRIES. J. Patrick Murphy, DePaul University; SueAnn
Strom, DePaul University
BEST PRACTICES FIELD GUIDE FOR INTERNATIONAL AND GRADUATE
STUDY IN THE FIELD OF NONPROFIT MANAGEMENT. Crystal
Dujowich, University of San Diego
43