New edition of “Human Services as Complex Organizations” released

December 18, 2009 at 4:39 pm | In amenities, job centers, new books, non-profits, poverty, race, social service agencies, welfare offices, what to read | Leave a Comment

Sociologist and social welfare scholar Yeheskel Hasenfeld has recently published a new edition of his seminal volume, Human Services as Complex Organizations. This comprehensive and state-of-the-art collection on human service organizations weaves the latest theoretical and empirical studies in macro theory with contemporary examples from hospitals, schools, social service organizations, mental health centers, and public welfare agencies. Blending theory with application, this outstanding anthology highlights the moral choices and accomplishments made by human service organizations. University of Michigan Professor Emerius Mayer Zald writes, “Hasenfeld has done it again. An excellent collection of essays on many of the most important trends and issues involving human service organizations.” The volume features essays from urbanorgs.org members Celeste Watkins-Hayes, Evelyn Brodkin, Stephen R. Smith, Jodi Sandfort and many others.

Continuing the role model debate

December 16, 2009 at 3:33 pm | In non-profits, race, social organization, youth | Leave a Comment
Tags:

Around the country, African American males are still feeling empowered by President Obama’s election, believing that the Head of State affects change through legislation and by serving as a powerful role model.

But he may also be serving as an inspiration for renewed community engagement and connection through non-profit organizations.

Three of the nation’s largest black fraternities have formed a partnership with Big Brothers Big Sisters of America. The fraternities — Omega Psi Phi, Alpha Phi Alpha and Kappa Alpha Psi — recently held a summit in Atlanta, Georgia to decide how to recruit more black men as mentors.

The number of black men volunteering at Big Brothers Big Sisters has increased. About 800 more African-American men have become big brothers since Obama’s election, compared with the same time last year, a group spokeswoman says.

“I’ve never seen anything like it,” David Miller, co-founder of the Urban Leadership Institute in Baltimore, Maryland said of the President’s impact on civic engagement among black men.

Black men cite President Obama’s choice not to use his struggles as excuses as inspiration do the same. A year later, his speech calling men to step up still echoes for many as they explore ways to reach the country’s youth. Existing community organizations serve as the conduit through which to get involved.

To read more on CNN about the connection between the increased in mentoring among Black men, President Obama, and developing partnerships between civic organizations, please click here.

Study finds racial difference in prevalence of political advocacy organizations

July 9, 2009 at 10:26 am | In immigrants, non-profits, organizational density, political organizations, social movements, what to read | Leave a Comment

uarSarah Reckhow’s “The Distinct Patterns of Organized and Elected Representation of Racial and Ethnic Groups,” published in Urban Affairs, uses data from Melissa DATA and newspaper accounts.   She finds that, for Latinos and Asian-Americans, the group’s proportion in the population increases the number of political advocay organizations; for African-Americans, however, the pattern does not hold.  From the abstract: Studies of minority political incorporation have demonstrated that advocacy organizations are critical for advancing minority electoral success and policy change. Drawing on an original data set of 30 midsized U.S. cities, the author evaluates the extent of organized representation of racial and ethnic groups and the effect of organized representation on elected representation. Latinos and Asian-Americans both have greater numbers of local advocacy organizations as the groups’ proportion of the population increases. Yet many cities with sizable African-American populations have a lower density of advocacy organizations than cities with fewer African-Americans. A smaller field of organizations increases elected representation for African-Americans but not for Latinos.

Joe Galaskiewicz receives NSF funding to study Phoenix organizations and their impact on the urban community

May 21, 2009 at 7:34 pm | In amenities, barbershops, beauty salons, churches, grocery stores, neighborhoods, news, non-profits, organizational density, organizational networks, social service agencies, supermarkets | Leave a Comment

phoenix-downtown

Joe Galaskiewicz at the University of Arizona recently received $162,274 from
the National Science Foundation to fund his project, “Organizations and their
Impact on the Urban Community.” This funding helps Joe continue his research on
the distribution of organizational resources across the Phoenix metropolitan
area, their effect on what children do in the free time on the weekends, and
how organizations migrate across the metropolitan community in response to
demographic shifts, changes in zoning laws, and competition among
organizational providers. The research looks at a broad range of
establishments that serve community residents including parks, recreation
centers, churches, retail outlets, restaurants, bowling and fitness centers,
barber shops, department stores, malls, theatres, and many, many more local
establishments. For some of Joe’s preliminary results, go to:

http://www.childresearch.net/RESOURCE/RESEARCH/2007/GALASKIEWICZ.HTM

Welfare States in Transition Symposium – May 15, 2009

April 25, 2009 at 10:22 am | In conference, non-profits, welfare offices | Leave a Comment

REGISTRATION IS NOW OPEN!

Please click below

https://ssanet.uchicago.edu/rsvp/centennial/event.cfm?eventid=090515

Registration is required for attendance.

The University of Chicago -School of Social Service Administration Centennial Welfare States in Transition: Social Policy Transformation in Organizational Practice

Friday, May 15, 2009
9:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. with reception to follow

The School of Social Service Administration
969 East 60th Street
Chicago, IL 60637

Organized by: Evelyn Brodkin, Associate Professor

Recent decades have witnessed a transformation in social policies and practices in the U.S. and internationally. Some of the most dramatic changes are occurring in policies that are reshaping the relationship between welfare and work. This symposium will examine this transformation, not only as enacted in law, but as enacted in practice. It will feature a series of papers and discussion that offer organizations-eye views of ways in which the changing relationship between welfare and work is being translated into practice in different states, cities, and in other countries.

The papers and discussion will consider shifts in both policy and practice, advancing new ways of thinking about the role of organizations in social policy transformation. As welfare and work policies have changed, so have the administrative arrangements under which they are implemented, arrangements increasingly constructed around new public management strategies of devolution, contracting, and performance measurement. How are these changes in policy and practice redefining the relationship between disadvantaged citizens, the state, and the market?

This symposium brings together researchers examining welfare-to-work as a global policy trend and new public management as a global administrative trend. It provides a forum for a discussion of the effects of these trends and their implications for future efforts to address poverty, inequality, and marginalization.

Confirmed Speakers:

Michael Adler
School of Social and Political Science, University of Edinburgh – Scotland
Martin Brussig
University of Duisburg-Essen, Institut Arbeit und Qualifikation (Institute for Work, Skills and Training) – Germany
Joel Handler
University of California Los Angeles (UCLA), School of Law and School of Public Affairs – USA
Yeheskel Hasenfeld
University of California Los Angeles (UCLA), School of Public Affairs, Department of Social Welfare – USA
Henning Jorgenson
Aalborg University, Centre for Labour Market Research (CARMA) – Denmark
Petra Kaps
Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin für Sozialforschung (Social Science Research Center Berlin), Institut für Arbeitsmarkt und Berufsforschung (Institute for Labor Market Policy and Employment) – Germany
Matthias Knuth
University of Duisburg-Essen,Institut Arbeit und Qualifikation (Institute for Work, Skills and Training) – Germany
Susan Lambert
University of Chicago, School of Social Service Administration – USA
Flemming Larsen
Aalborg University, Centre for Labour Market Research (CARMA) – Denmark
Michael Lipsky
Demos, Center for the Public Sector, and Georgetown University, Public Policy Institute – USA
Gregory Marston
University of Queensland, School of Social Work and Human Services – Australia
Jennifer Mosley
University of Chicago, School of Social Service Administration – USA
William Sites
University of Chicago, School of Social Service Administration – USA
C.C.A.M. (Els) Sol
University of Amsterdam, Hugo Sinzheimer Institute – Netherlands
Joe Soss
University of Minnesota, Hubert H. Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs – USA
Ludo Struyven
Catholic University of Leuven, Higher Institute of Labour Studies – Belgium
H.H.A. (Rik) van Berkel
Utrecht University, School of Governance – Netherlands
Celeste Watkins-Hayes
Northwestern University, Departments of Sociology and African-American Studies – USA

This Symposium is sponsored in part by the Danish Social Science Research Council and RESq – an international research network studying reform of employment services and social welfare policy.

Contact 001.773.702.1166 or centennial@ssa.uchicago.edu with
questions.

http://ssacentennial.uchicago.edu/events/symposium-brodkin.shtml

Two new studies find that supplementary educational settings and ethnoburbs important for Chinese immigrant incorporation

March 17, 2009 at 10:24 am | In amenities, churches, immigrants, neighborhoods, non-profits | Leave a Comment

In, “The Ethnic System of Supplementary Education: Non-profit and For-profit Institutions in Los Angeles’ Chinese Immigrant Community,” Min Zhou examines how particular types of informal social settings created and structured within ethnic communities generate resources for school success. By looking specifically at non-profit and for-profit institutions serving youth in Los Angeles’ Chinese immigrant community, Zhou highlights an ethnic system of supplementary education that not only offers tangible support but also reinforces cultural norms in pushing immigrant children to succeed in school. The full citation for the piece is:

Zhou, Min. 2008. “The Ethnic System of Supplementary Education: Non-profit and Forprofit Institutions in Los Angeles’ Chinese Immigrant Community.” Pp. 229-251 in Beth Shinn and Hirokazu Yoshikawa, eds., Toward Positive Youth Development: Transforming Schools and Community Programs. New York: Oxford University Press.

In addition, Min Zhou and her co-authors have published a piece looking at new patterns of residential assimilation through the case of a sprawling Chinese ethnoburb in the San Gabriel Valley of California. Using U.S. Census data, field observations, and previous literature, the authors demonstrate that new patterns of immigrant settlement are reshaping Chinese American commercial investment, real estate, educational institutions, and other organizations. The full citation for the piece is:

Zhou, Min, Yen-fen Tseng, and Rebecca Y. Kim. 2008. “Rethinking Residential Assimilation through the Case of Chinese Ethnoburbs in the San Gabriel Valley, California.” Amerasia Journal 34 (3): 55-83.


Urban Affairs Association Meetings – Panel of Interest

February 18, 2009 at 10:29 am | In conference, non-profits | Leave a Comment

We are pleased to announce that several urbanorgs members will be featured on a panel at this year’s Urban Affairs Association meetings on Saturday, March 7, 2009 in Chicago. Organized and moderated by Heather MacIndoe, these talks represent exciting new directions in the study of nonprofit institutions in urban contexts.
Renaissance Chicago Hotel
1 West Wacker Drive
Chicago, Illinois 60601
Panel 123 New Roles for Urban Nonprofits
Saturday, 10:35 AM–12:00 PM, Bucktown A and B (3rd Floor)
Moderator: Heather MacIndoe (University of Massachusetts Boston)

  • Nonprofits and the City Bureaucracy: Opportunities for Immigrant Political Incorporation, Els de Graauw, Harvard University

  • Civic Engagement by Local Community Nonprofits: Bringing New Voices into Urban Governance? Susan Ostrander, Tufts University

  • Charter Schools, Urban Nonprofits and Neighborhood Revitalization: A Comparison of New York City and New Orleans, Charisse Gulosino, Brown University

  • Sector Mobilization: Public Policy Initiatives of Nonprofit Membership Associations, Heather MacIndoe, University of Massachusetts – Boston & Sarah Hogue, University of Massachusetts – Boston

  • Scenes, Nonprofits, and Urban Development, Terry Nichols Clark, University of Chicago & Eric Rogers, University of Chicago

For more on this conference, visit http://www.udel.edu/uaa/annual_meeting/index.html.

New paper finds that vertical ties among organizations needed for economic reform

January 15, 2009 at 12:16 am | In neighborhoods, non-profits, organizational networks, poverty, what to read | Leave a Comment

In “Collaboration Is Not Enough: Virtuous Cycles of Reform in
Transportation Policy,” Margaret Weir, Jane Rongerude, and Christopher K. Ansell analyze the vertical and horizontal networks of development organizations in Chicago and Atlanta. From the abstract: “Over the past two decades, a burgeoning literature has touted the promise of regional collaboration to address a wide range of issues ranging from economic development to poverty and sustainability. This article challenges the premise that horizontal collaboration alone can empower regional decisionmaking venues. By analyzing the organizational networks that emerged in Chicago and Los Angeles in the wake of federal transportation policy reforms in the early 1990s, we show that vertical power is essential to building regional capacities. Only by exercising power at multiple levels of the political system can local reformers launch a virtuous cycle of reform that begins to build enduring regional capacities.” Forthcoming in Urban Affairs Review.

New issue of City of Community features symposium on the ghetto

January 5, 2009 at 12:54 am | In amenities, childcare centers, grocery stores, neighborhoods, news, non-profits, organizational density, organizational networks, poverty, social organization, what to read | Leave a Comment

The latest issue of the journal City and Community (December 2008 ) features several articles that explore analytic assumptions, international perspectives, and new directions in the study of communities commonly referred to as ghettos. In one of the pieces, “Four Reasons to Abandon the Idea of ‘The Ghetto,’” Mario Small questions the common use of the concept “the ghetto” to theorize conditions in poor, predominantly black urban neighborhoods in the United States. He argues, among other things, that poor black neighborhoods differ dramatically from place to place in their organizational density, the number of banks, childcare centers, pharmacies, and other everyday organizations.

Papers in the symposium:

The Ghetto: Origins, History, Discourse (p 347-352)
Bruce Haynes, Ray Hutchison

Involuntary Segregation and the Ghetto: Disconnecting Process and Place (p 353-357)
Herbert J. Gans

A Century of Harlem in New York City: Some Notes on Migration, Consolidation, Segregation, and Recent Developments (p 358-365)
Andrew A. Beveridge

Barrio Geneology (p 366-371)
Diego Vigil

From the Outside Looking in: A “European” Perspective on the Ghetto (p 372-377)
Talja Blokland

Enclaves, Condominiums, and Favelas: Where Are the Ghettos in Brazil? (p 378-383)
Circe Monteiro

Reconsidering the “Ghetto”1 (p 384-388 )
Anmol Chaddha, William Julius Wilson

Four Reasons to Abandon the Idea of “The Ghetto” (p 389-398 )
Mario Luis Small

City and Community Volume 7, Number 4, December 2008

New paper finds that non-profit organizations sustain immigrant mobilization

November 28, 2008 at 5:42 pm | In immigrants, neighborhoods, non-profits, organizational networks, what to read | Leave a Comment

Voting With Their Feet: Nonprofit Organizations and Immigrant Mobilization,” by Hector Cordero-Guzman, Nina Martin, Victoria Quiroz-Becerra, and NikTheodore, looks at the role of immigrant non-profit organizations in social movements. Reacting to the series of marches in 2006 for immigrant rights throughout the United States, the authors question the idea that the marches were “spontaneous outburst of frustration.” Instead, they argue, the marches were “in large part the result of long-standing cooperative efforts and networks of immigrant-serving nonprofit organizations. Immigrant-serving organizations were at the forefront of organizing public education campaigns, advocacy activities, and community mobilization efforts leading up to the demonstrations.” Based on survey on 498 nonprofit organizations in Chicago and New York conducted in 2005. In American Behavioral Scientist.

Blog at WordPress.com. | Theme: Pool by Borja Fernandez.
Entries and comments feeds.