Collaboration and partnership are well-known characteristics of the nonprofit sector, as well as important tools of public policy and for creating public value. But how do nonprofits form successful partnerships? From the perspective of nonprofit practice, the conditions leading to collaboration and partnership are seldom ideal. Nonprofit executives contemplating interorganizational cooperation, collaboration, networks, partnership, and merger face a bewildering array of challenges.
InPartnerships the Nonprofit Way: What Matters, What Doesn't, the authors share the success and failures of 52 nonprofit leaders. By depicting and contextualizing nonprofit organization characteristics and practices that make collaboration successful, the authors propose new theory and partnership principles that challenge conventional concepts centered on contractual fulfillment and accountability, and provide practical advice that can assist nonprofit leaders and others in creating and sustaining strategic, mutually beneficial partnerships of their own.
Acknowledgements
A Note on Quoted Material
Introduction: Why This Book?
1. Summing Up, Summing Down: A Review of the Literature on Partnership
2. Nonprofit Partnerships: The Gold Standard
3. The Point of Partnering
4. Good to Great: Recognizing the Signs of High Quality Partnerships
5. Nonprofit Partnerships by Sub-Sector
6. Grant Makers Partnership Practices
7. Toward Nonprofit Theory: Collaboration as a Way of (Work) Life
Appendix
Index
Stuart C. Mendel is the first Fellow appointed by the Nonprofit Academic Centers Council, editor (with Susan Cruise) of theJournal of Ideologyand Associate Editor for Acquisitions for theJournal of Nonprofit Education and Leadership. He served for twenty years as Assistant Dean and Director of the Center for Nonprofit Policy and Practice at Cleveland State University. He is author ofMediating Organizations, Private GoverlC0