Life, Death, and Zombies: Revisiting Traditional Concepts of Nonprofit Demise

There is a robust literature examining financial vulnerability and demise of nonprofit organizations, particularly in the United States. However, much of this knowledge stems from inconsistent definitions of nonprofit demise. Using eight comparative case studies, this study revisits traditional defi...

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Main Author: Elizabeth A.M. Searing
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Midwest Public Affairs Conference 2020-12-01
Series:Journal of Public and Nonprofit Affairs
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jpna.org/index.php/jpna/article/view/357
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spelling doaj-7655a512637140d58d782ca3769c69452020-12-01T12:27:08ZengMidwest Public Affairs ConferenceJournal of Public and Nonprofit Affairs2381-37172020-12-016335437610.20899/jpna.6.3.354-376196Life, Death, and Zombies: Revisiting Traditional Concepts of Nonprofit DemiseElizabeth A.M. Searing0University of Albany (SUNY)There is a robust literature examining financial vulnerability and demise of nonprofit organizations, particularly in the United States. However, much of this knowledge stems from inconsistent definitions of nonprofit demise. Using eight comparative case studies, this study revisits traditional definitions of nonprofit life and death to better reflect actual organizational operating status. Following this reclassification, findings from this study show that certain internal and external characteristics are more important in determining a nonprofit’s operational status. In particular, nonprofits whose missions involve a particular regulation are more likely to close due to mission completion or obsolescence; however, these nonprofits also tend to either reincarnate or expand scope if other factors are favorable. The findings also appear to show that the existence of conflict or competition with an outside entity boosts nonprofit cohesion. Internal tensions, however, are particularly harmful.http://jpna.org/index.php/jpna/article/view/357nonprofit demiseclosureinterpersonal conflict
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Elizabeth A.M. Searing
spellingShingle Elizabeth A.M. Searing
Life, Death, and Zombies: Revisiting Traditional Concepts of Nonprofit Demise
Journal of Public and Nonprofit Affairs
nonprofit demise
closure
interpersonal conflict
author_facet Elizabeth A.M. Searing
author_sort Elizabeth A.M. Searing
title Life, Death, and Zombies: Revisiting Traditional Concepts of Nonprofit Demise
title_short Life, Death, and Zombies: Revisiting Traditional Concepts of Nonprofit Demise
title_full Life, Death, and Zombies: Revisiting Traditional Concepts of Nonprofit Demise
title_fullStr Life, Death, and Zombies: Revisiting Traditional Concepts of Nonprofit Demise
title_full_unstemmed Life, Death, and Zombies: Revisiting Traditional Concepts of Nonprofit Demise
title_sort life, death, and zombies: revisiting traditional concepts of nonprofit demise
publisher Midwest Public Affairs Conference
series Journal of Public and Nonprofit Affairs
issn 2381-3717
publishDate 2020-12-01
description There is a robust literature examining financial vulnerability and demise of nonprofit organizations, particularly in the United States. However, much of this knowledge stems from inconsistent definitions of nonprofit demise. Using eight comparative case studies, this study revisits traditional definitions of nonprofit life and death to better reflect actual organizational operating status. Following this reclassification, findings from this study show that certain internal and external characteristics are more important in determining a nonprofit’s operational status. In particular, nonprofits whose missions involve a particular regulation are more likely to close due to mission completion or obsolescence; however, these nonprofits also tend to either reincarnate or expand scope if other factors are favorable. The findings also appear to show that the existence of conflict or competition with an outside entity boosts nonprofit cohesion. Internal tensions, however, are particularly harmful.
topic nonprofit demise
closure
interpersonal conflict
url http://jpna.org/index.php/jpna/article/view/357
work_keys_str_mv AT elizabethamsearing lifedeathandzombiesrevisitingtraditionalconceptsofnonprofitdemise
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