Civil Society, Economy and the State
doc. Ing. Vladimír Hyánek, Ph.D.
Civil Society, Economy and the State

OBJECTIVES & QUESTIONS we will address in the course include:

Understanding various aspects, history and theories of the nonprofit sector and why nonprofit/community benefit organizations are significant in social, political and economic terms;

  • What role have nonprofit organizations played in the world and how has this changed over time?
  • What contributions do nonprofit organizations make to society?

 

Understand and critically reflect upon the nature of the links between nonprofit organizations, democracy, governments and markets, and the implications of these relationships for leadership and management;

  • How do and should nonprofit organizations interact with government and market institutions?
  • What are the implications of blurring boundaries among these institutions?

 

Identify the major human and financial resources and key management and ethical issues confronting leaders of nonprofit organizations and learn and practice varying strategies to address these.

  • How does the increasing hybridity of organizations impact governance and management of nonprofit/community benefit organizations?
  • How can nonprofit organizations best achieve their visions and missions in the face of competing challenges and opportunities?


COURSE RESOURCES

This semester we will draw upon a diverse body of resources to support our learning. Some materials come from book chapters or academic journals. Some readings are professional reports published on websites or even webcasts. The readings are selected to give you exposure to both academic and professional materials that represent diverse perspectives.

All readings will be posted on the IS, so that students can easily access the material. There are no required textbooks – all readings will be accessible online.


COURSE ASSIGNMENTS AND EVALUATION

1. Participation is key to creating a “classroom-as-organizing” environment. The goal is for each of us to contribute to the course discourse and enhance the collective’s knowledge.

Therefore, “showing up” each week is not enough, and participation cannot be made-up. There will be instruction, but learning also takes place through active engagement with the materials and interactions with classmates, rather than through passive listening to others.

Therefore, your participation, as an active learner and contributor to the class, is required.

I encourage you to use the course sessions to not only to articulate your own assessment of class readings, but also to step out of your own perspective and consider/propose opposing or creative views. The classroom should create an environment for civil discussions and respect. 


2. Reading Reflections (max 30 points; 5 points each); You must achieve at least 20 points in total

Every RR must contain: Synthesis of the main ideas, identification of the main problems or proposed solutions, your personal view of the problem, or an assessment of the contribution the RR has made to you.

Responses should be approximately 1-3 paragraphs (around 250 words in total).

Please submit RRs by email (or hard copy) no later than the start of the meeting (so no later than 2 pm every Wednesday).  

Feedback and points will be awarded through the IS.


3. Final paper and presentation. 

Final paper: max 10 pages, it shall reflect some of the issues covered by the course. Please consult your topic individually with me and submit your topic during week 9 at the latest. The deadline for paper submission is 31/12/2021.

Presentation: There are three sessions for presenting partial results or discussing problems you may have with the paper (see Interactive Syllabi). 

You should briefly present the topic you are writing about, justify its necessity and importance, outline the progress so far, and possibly present preliminary conclusions. We will then discuss each presentation.

 

Teacher recommends to study from 12/9/2022 to 18/9/2022.
Chapter contains:
1
PDF
2
Study Materials
1
Study text
Teacher recommends to study from 19/9/2022 to 25/9/2022.
Teacher recommends to study from 26/9/2022 to 2/10/2022.

This introductory lecture will focus on the main research traditions in non-profit sector studies. It centres on an institutional choice approach which can be divided into two blocs; failure performance-approach explaining the existence of civil society organizations – understood here primarily as non-profit organizations – as a failure of other institutions, and the transaction cost approach, which explains the institutional forms with alternative contractual arrangements. Within this framework, most influential theories will be examined: public goods theory (Weisbrod), heterogeneity theory (James), trustworthiness theory (Hansmann, Arrow, Nelson & Krashinsky), third party government theory (Salamon) as representatives of the former stream, and the concept of transaction costs (Williamson, Krashinsky, Ben-Ner & van Hoomissen) as representative of the latter.

Chapter contains:
1
PDF
1
Study Materials
1
Study text
1
Web
Teacher recommends to study from 3/10/2022 to 9/10/2022.
Chapter contains:
1
PDF
1
Study Materials
1
Study text
1
Web
Teacher recommends to study from 10/10/2022 to 16/10/2022.

Tadeáš Pala

Chapter contains:
1
Study text
Teacher recommends to study from 17/10/2022 to 23/10/2022.

powerpoint presentation

Chapter contains:
1
PDF
1
Study Materials
1
Study text
Teacher recommends to study from 24/10/2022 to 30/10/2022.
Teacher recommends to study from 31/10/2022 to 6/11/2022.

presentation of research results

Chapter contains:
1
PDF
1
Study Materials
1
Study text
1
Web
Teacher recommends to study from 7/11/2022 to 13/11/2022.
Chapter contains:
1
PDF
1
Study Materials
1
Study text
Teacher recommends to study from 14/11/2022 to 20/11/2022.
Chapter contains:
1
Study Materials
1
Study text
1
Web
Teacher recommends to study from 21/11/2022 to 27/11/2022.
Teacher recommends to study from 28/11/2022 to 4/12/2022.
Teacher recommends to study from 5/12/2022 to 11/12/2022.
Chapter contains:
1
PDF
1
Study text
Teacher recommends to study from 12/12/2022 to 18/12/2022.
Previous