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Collaborations with faith-based social service coalitions

✍ Scribed by Helen Rose Ebaugh; Janet S. Chafetz; Paula F. Pipes


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2007
Tongue
English
Weight
157 KB
Volume
18
Category
Article
ISSN
1048-6682

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Based on the first national survey of faith‐based social service coalitions in the United States, this article presents data on the degree to which these nonprofit organizations collaborate with other specific organizational types, as well as the range and intensity of these collaborations. In general, faith‐based coalitions tend to collaborate most frequently with other faith‐based agencies, a pattern especially characteristic of the more religiously expressive ones. However, collaboration with non‐faith‐based organizations is also quite common. Based on seven organizational characteristics, we are able to predict which faith‐based coalitions are most likely to collaborate with different types of organizations: coalitions that have more explicitly religious policies and practices with reference to clients and staffs are less likely to participate in intense collaborations with some types of secular organizations, and consistently less likely to do so with all types of governmental agencies.


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