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“This book is an important milestone.”
- Tessie Guillermo, Community Technology Foundation of California
NONPROFITS AND TECHNOLOGY
Emerging Research for Usable Knowledge
Michael Cortés, formerly of University of Colorado, Denver
Kevin M. Rafter, University of San Francisco
From the introduction
“How can nonprofit organizations make better use of today’s rapidly changing information and communication technology? What obstacles do nonprofits face? This book presents research on special challenges facing nonprofits when investing in new technology. The nonprofit manager forewarned is forearmed.”
This book identifies the ways that new information and communication technology both help and hinder nonprofit effectiveness. The book establishes a body of dependable research on the subject, compiling the resources needed to make better technology-adoption and management decisions in the nonprofit sector.
Features
- Chapters by both scholars and practitioners
- Explains the ways in which new technology affects nonprofit effectiveness
- Chapters organized to emphasize the varying approaches to common issues
- Written in a clear, accessible style
- Empirical evidence ranges from in depth case studies to large data sets of thousands of surveys
Contents
Foreword by Tessie Guillermo
Introduction, by Michael Cortés and Kevin Rafter 
PART 1: TECHNOLOGICAL CAPACITY OF NONPROFITS |
Chapter 1: |
Infrastructure and Activities: Relating IT to the Work of Nonprofit Organizations
Richard M. Clerkin and Kirsten A. Grønbjerg |
Chapter 2: |
The Use of Computer and Office Technology among New York City’s Nonprofit Organizations
Julian Wolpert and John E. Seley  |
Chapter 3: |
Adoption of New-Wave Electronic Advocacy Techniques by Nonprofit Child Advocacy Organizations
John McNutt |
PART 2: BARRIERS TO ADOPTING TECHNOLOGY |
Chapter 4: |
Barriers to Information Technology Usage in the Nonprofit Sector
Peter Manzo and Bill Pitkin |
Chapter 5: |
Bridging the “Effectiveness Divide” in ICT Use:
The Case of Volunteer Recruitment in Canada
Yvonne Harrison and Vic Murray |
PART 3: THE POTENTIAL FOR TECHNOLOGY |
Chapter 6: |
Question of Empowerment: Information Technology and Civic Engagement in New Haven, Connecticut
Peter Dobkin Hall |
Chapter 7: |
Do Information Technologies Influence the Operations of Community Development Corporations?
Samuel Nunn |
PART 4: STRATEGIES FOR IMPROVING TECHNOLOGY USE |
Chapter 8: |
Designing Information Systems around Decision Making
Dale Fitch |
Chapter 9: |
Geeks for Good: Technology Evangelism and the Role of Circuit Riders in IT Adoption among Nonprofits
Paul-Brian McInerney |
Chapter 10: |
Organizational Strategies to Foster the Adaptation and Integration of Technology in Grassroots Social Justice Organizations
Carol Silverman and Kevin Rafter |
Appendix A About the Contributors Index
About the Editors
Michael Cortés (PhD, University of California, Berkley; MSW, University of Michigan) is the former director of the Institute for Nonprofit Organization Management at the University of San Francisco. He served previously on the faculty of the Graduate School of Public Affairs at University of Colorado, Denver. Other positions held include Vice-President for Research, Advocacy, and Legislation at the National Council of La Raza in Washington, D.C., Director of Planning, Finance and Administration at the Levi Strauss Foundation in San Francisco, and Project Director at Interstate Research Associates in Washington, D.C., and Texas.
Kevin Rafter (MA, Graduate Center of the City University of New York) is a research associate at the Institute for Nonprofit Organization Management at the University of San Francisco. He completed extensive course work in research methodology, applied statistics, urban social policy, housing policy, and community development. He is currently working on a dissertation about the location of Northern California nonprofit social service organizations relative to social needs and financial resources.
2007, Paper, 212 pages, ISBN 978-1-933478-06-7, Price $32.95 |