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4.0 out of 5 stars Good Resource for Strategic Thinkers and the Curious
This book does a great job of answering basic questions about nonprofits and the nonprofit sector. It also analyzes each segment of the nonprofit sector and brings out some key data and observations about each one. Finally, it seeks to look into the future of nonprofits. Anyone interested in the sector, and especially nonprofit executive directors, consultants, and...
Published on April 26, 2005 by Michael Wyland

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3.0 out of 5 stars Book has a different cover
Could have described that it is not the book in the picture. I paid for the book in the picture, and received a book with a weird blue cover instead.
Published 11 months ago by sara1227


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3.0 out of 5 stars Book has a different cover, February 24, 2011
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This review is from: Nonprofit Nation: A New Look at the Third America (Hardcover)
Could have described that it is not the book in the picture. I paid for the book in the picture, and received a book with a weird blue cover instead.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Good Resource for Strategic Thinkers and the Curious, April 26, 2005
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This review is from: Nonprofit Nation: A New Look at the Third America (Hardcover)
This book does a great job of answering basic questions about nonprofits and the nonprofit sector. It also analyzes each segment of the nonprofit sector and brings out some key data and observations about each one. Finally, it seeks to look into the future of nonprofits. Anyone interested in the sector, and especially nonprofit executive directors, consultants, and others who should be involved in global nonprofit strategy will find this book to be a valuable resource.

The first striking lesson I learned from Dr. O'Neill's book is that, while the nonprofit sector has been growing significantly in the past 30 years, in many ways it has just kept pace with the rest of the economy. Personal, corporate, and foundation giving are remarkably stable, and the percentage of charity dollars given by donors to segments such as education, health care, the arts, and international causes have remained constant since the 1970s. Even the growth in the number of new nonprofits seeking IRS recognition has been relatively constant (in percentage terms) since at least the early 1980s.

The dollar totals change, but the percentages are constant. Knowing this prompts important questions about how charities plan, how and whether they solicit for funds, and where likely support is to be found for new initiatives.

Dr. O'Neill doesn't shrink from acknowledging the vast amount we don't know about the nonprofit sector. Anyone analyzing the data recognize that policymakers and researchers alike are making best guesses rather than reaching definite conclusions in many areas of analysis. We're a long way from having "census" data on the nonprofit sector.

There are almost 1 million charities recognized by the IRS, but we don't know for sure how many are active and how many are defunct. There are almost 2 million nonprofits of all types (charities plus churches, labor unions, chambers of commerce, private clubs, etc.) that the IRS lists. The Form 990 returns -- that only IRS-recognized charities with revenue greater than $25,000 are required to file -- are works of interpretation by filers as well as researchers.

In fact, much nonprofit activity occurs outside record-keeping capabilities. Giving a friend's child the money to attend college, organizing a softball team, or countless other activities never reach the level of IRS recognition, much less scrutiny. We can study what we know, and guess about the rest based on other data sources.

Dr. O'Neill has done an admirable job of interpreting these other sources, adding the IRS and other government data, and presenting a plausible picture of the nonprofit economy.
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5 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Nonprofit Nation: A New Look at the Third America, November 29, 2004
This review is from: Nonprofit Nation: A New Look at the Third America (Hardcover)
Don't waste your time! If you want to read a boring, poorly researched book of statistics at least four years old, then I suggest you buy it. But the statistics are even out of date. If you have lived on this planet for a few years, you already know about the examples he uses. Pathetic writing. If for some reason the examples are new to you don't trust them. He says Ralph Nader advocated for a safer Chevrolet Corvette. If the author doesn't know it was a Chevrolet Corvair, then he is clueless! Read Greater Good by Claire Gaudiani if you want to learn something.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Nonproft Nation Review, March 9, 2006
This review is from: Nonprofit Nation: A New Look at the Third America (Hardcover)
This is a fantastic book. It is filled with thought provoking statistics and charts, accompanied by an easy to read history of the multi-faceted nonprofit sector.
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Nonprofit Nation: A New Look at the Third America
Nonprofit Nation: A New Look at the Third America by Michael O'Neill (Hardcover - June 15, 2002)
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