The Nonprofit FAQ
Approaches to the History of Nonprofits |
On 5/23, David Hammack (dch3@po.cwru.edu) sent the following post to ARNOVA-L: I have edited a READER on the development of the Nonprofit Sector in American Society for Indiana University Press; I hope to get a final version of the whole project to them in the next two or three weeks. Meanwhile I have edited and prepared introductions for the following materials. [The contents of Hammack's READER have been moved to the end of this post] David C. Hammack Benton Professor of History Department of History Case Western Reserve University 10900 Euclid Avenue Cleveland, Ohio 44106-7107 (Order http://www.amazon.com/dp/0253214106/?tag=internetnonprofi">Making the Nonprofit Sector in the United States: A Reader from Amazon.Com. A royalty will be paid that will help maintain this site.) Peter Dobkin Hall (peter.d.hall@yale.edu) responded to Hammack's message as follows: I think its worth mentioning the difference of approach between David Hammack's READER and the HISTORY OF PHILANTHROPY & VOLUNTARISM that I am completing. I question whether one can make post hoc attributions of collective identity to a domain of institutions which had no consciousness of themselves as a "sector" before the 1970s. When we look at economic, technological, and organizational developments in terms of their subsequent history, we risk constructing false continua, distorting the motives, perceptions, and actions of historical actors, and, portraying the past as the present writ small. More seriously, in terms of the history of nonprofitdom, such an approach risks exaggerating the importance and centrality of private sector/"nonprofit" institutions, ignoring both the rich diversity of institutional practices and downplaying the significance of public institutions and public philanthropy and voluntarism. Devolution calls attention to the questionable nature of the nonprofit sector concept as an analytical framework. In particular, it calls our attention to the tendency of firms to migrate across sector boundaries (to change ownership forms) with changes in economic, political, and legal conditions. In our own time, we see the massive migration of voluntary health care providers from nonprofit to for-profit and the impressive migration of religious organizations from being mutual benefit entities to being service providers. In the not too distant past (before 1950 or so), most arts and culture organizations were for-profit entities -- but firms migrated into the nonprofit domain with the creation of pertinent tax incentives, the proliferation of grantmaking foundations, and the establishment of the national arts and humanities endowments. As to hospitals, in the 1920s, only about a quarter were nonprofit (with the balance more or less equally divided between government and proprietary); by 1970, more than half were nonprofit, a third governmental, and a mere 12% proprietary. And then there's the whole issue of the shift of nonprofits from being donative/voluntary entities to being commercial enterprises operated by management professionals (i.e., are "nonprofits" the same thing as "voluntary associations"?). The point here is to stress that what we call the "nonprofit sector" changes constantly in scale and scope -- and, for this reason, trying to write its history from the standpoint of what it happens to be at the moment is an intellectually questionable enterprise. (For example, had Hammack done his reader a decade ago, odds are that religious organizations would not have been considered as extensively, if at all). Doing it David's way is, of course, a great deal easier than the alternative -- which requires the inclusion with a far broader range of voluntary organizations, many of which, like political parties and labor unions, are no longer considered part of the "nonprofit sector" (though historical personages like George Washington. Thomas Jefferson, and A. De Tocqueville certainly counted them as "self-created societies" and "voluntary associations"). One more point: we might well ask ourselves why we as scholars studying "civil society," the "nonprofit/Third/Independent" sector, or whatever you want to call it, are willing to limit our attention to "philanthropic" giving rather than looking at the broader spectrum of donative behavior which included political contributions and private gifts to public institutions. Why do we limit our attention to 501(c)3 and 4 organizations in the broad range of nonprofits? Why don't we pay more attention to hybrid entities like endowed public libraries, public universities, and parks? It seems to me that this limitations of view are not only artificial but intellectually indefensible. I think the scholars who identify with the nonprofits research community really need to ask themselves whether their job is to supply justifications for the organizational status quo or to engage the complexity of the past in order to suggest the diversity of possible future outcomes -- a future in which nonprofit organizations as we know them may well not exist. Chroniclers of nonprofits and other contemporary institutions and institutional arrangements would do well to heed Stephen Jay Gould's arguments against the "canonical" accounts of biological evolution : we are forced to pay an almost intolerable price for each major advance in knowledge and power -- the psychological cost of progressive dethronement from the center of things, and increasing marginality in an uncaring universe. . . . We cannot bear the central implication of this brave new world. If humanity arose just yesterday asd a small twig on one branch of a flourishing tree, then life may not, in any genuine sense, exist for us or because of us. Perhaps we are only an afterthought, a kind of cosmic accident, just one bauble on the Christmas tree of evolution. The old chain of being would provide the greatest comfort, but we now know that the vast majority of "simplet" creatures were not human ancestors or even prototypes, but only collateral branches on life's tree. . . . I cannot understand our continued allegiance to the manifestly false iconographies of ladder and cone except as a desperate finger in the dike of cosmically justified hope and arrogance. [WONDERFUL LIFE: THE BURGESS SHALE AND THE NATURE OF HISTORY (Norton, 1989), pp. 44-45]. Peter Dobkin Hall Research Scientist & Acting Director Program on Non-Profit Organizations Yale University Peter Dobkin Hall's narrative of the growth of the nonprofit sector can be found in the lead essay of The Jossey-Bass Handbook of Nonprofit Leadership and Management (2004) and in his Inventing the Nonprofit Sector (Johns Hopkins, 1992). (Order the http://www.amazon.com/dp/0787969958/?tag=internetnonprofi">The Jossey-Bass Handbook of Nonprofit Leadership and Management or "http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0801842727/internetnonprofi" >Inventing from Amazon.Com. A royalty will be paid that will help maintain this site. A recent paper of his is online; see "Philanthropy, The Welfare State, and the Transformation of American Public and Private Institutions, 1945-2000," at http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?cfid=415743&cftoken=93885160&abstract_id=262652) CONTENTS David Hammack, Making the Nonprofit Sector in the United States One. Colonial Theory: Established Churches 1. The Statute of Charitable Uses, 1601. 2. The Elizabethan Poor Law, 1601. 3. Brother Juan deEscalona, Report to the Viceroy of Mexico on Conditions at Santa Fe, 1601. 4. John Winthrop, A Model of Christian Charity, 1630. 5. Virginia General Assembly, Laws Regulating Religion, 1642. 6. Hugh Peter and Thomas Weld, New England's First Fruits, 1643. 7. Claude Jean Allouz, S.J., Account of the Ceremony Proclaiming New France, 1671. Two. Colonial Reality: Religious Diversity 8. Inhabitants of Flushing, Long Island, Remonstrance Against the Law Against Quakers, 1657. 9. Roger Greene, Virginia's Cure, 1662. 10. William Penn, The Great Case of Liberty of Conscience, 1670. 11. Cotton Mather, Bonifacius: Essays to Do Good, 1710. 12. William Livingston, Argument Against Anglican Control of King's College (Columbia), 1753 13. Charles Woodmason, Journal of the Carolina Backcountry, 1766-67. 14. Benjamin Franklin, Autobiography: Recollections of Institution-Building, 1771-84. Three. To The Constitution: Limited Government and Disestablishment 15. John Trenchard and Thomas Gordon, Cato's Letters: Arguments Against a Strong Central Government, 1720. 16. Isaac Backus, Argument Against Taxes for Religious Purposes in Massachusetts, 1774. 17. Thomas Jefferson, Virginia Act Establishing Religious Freedom, 1785. 18. James Madison, The Federalist, No. 10, 1789. 19. The Constitution of the United States, excerpts, 1789 and The First Amendment, 1791. Four. Voluntarism Under the Constitution 20. Lyman Beecher, Autobiographical Statement on the 1818 Disestablishment of the "Standing Order" in Connecticut, 1865. 21. The Dartmouth College Case: Daniel Webster, Argument Before the U.S. Supreme Court, 1818; Chief Justice John Marshall, Decision, and Joseph Story, Concurring Opinion, 1819. 22. Alexis deTocqueville, Political Associations in the United States, 1835, and Of The Use Which Americans Make of Public Associations in Civil Society, 1840. Five. Varieties of Religious Nonprofits 23. Organized Activity Among Slaves: Henry Bibb, The Suppression of Religion Among Slaves, 1849, and Daniel A. Payne, Account of Slave Preachers, 1839. 24. Robert Baird, The Voluntary Principle in American Christianity, 1844. 25. Peter Dobkin Hall, Institutions, Autonomy, and National Networks, 1982. 26. Jay P. Dolan, Social Catholicism, 1975. 27. Arthur A. Goren, The Jewish Tradition of Community, 1970. Six. Nonprofit Organizations as Alternative Power Structures 28. Suzanne Lebsock, Women Together: Organizations in Antebellum Petersburg, Virginia, 1984. 29. Kathleen D. McCarthy, Parallel Power Structures: Women and the Voluntary Sphere, 1990. 30. W. E. B. Du Bois, Economic Cooperation Among Negro Americans, 1907. Seven. Science, Professionalism, Foundations, and Federations. 31. Debate Over Government Subsidies: Amos G. Warner, Argument Against Public Subsidies to Private Charities, 1908; Everett P. Wheeler, The Unofficial Government of Cities, 1900. 32. David Rosner, Business at the Bedside: Health Care in Brooklyn, 1890-1915, 1979. 33. Frederick T. Gates, Address on the Tenth Anniversary of the Rockefeller Institute, 1911. 34. David C. Hammack, Community Foundations: The Delicate Question of Purpose, 1989. 35. John R. Seeley et al, Community Chest, 1957. 36. David L. Sills, The March of Dimes: Origins and Prospects, 1957. Eight. Federal Regulation and Federal Funds 37. Pierce v Society of the Sisters: William D. Guthrie and Bernard Hershkopf, Brief for Private Schools; Justice McReynolds, Decision of the U.S. Supreme Court. 1925. 38. Debate Over a Nonprofit Organization in Mississippi: Senator John Stennis and Attorney Marian Wright, Testimony on the Child Development Group of Mississippi and the Head Start Program, 1967. 39. The Filer Commission, The Third Sector, 1974. 40. Steven Rathgeb Smith and Michael Lipsky, The Political Economy of Nonprofit Revenues, 1993. 41. Rust v. Sullivan: Chief Justice William Renquist, Decision of the U.S. Supreme Court 1986. (Order "http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0253334896/internetnonprofi" > Making the Nonprofit Sector in the United States : A Reader from Amazon.Com. A royalty will be paid that will help maintain this site.) Reposted with format improvements 1/25/99 -- PB |