Nonprofit Economic Development Organizations and the Institutional Arrangement of Local Economic Development

In the United States, local economic development is increasingly being managed by nonprofit organizations. However, the institutional arrangement of local economic development is an understudied topic in the scholarly literature on nonprofit management and leadership. This paper examines why communi...

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Main Authors: William Hatcher, Augustine Hammond
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Midwest Public Affairs Conference 2018-04-01
Series:Journal of Public and Nonprofit Affairs
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.jpna.org/index.php/jpna/article/view/134
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spelling doaj-be0366a45897450cb49f6b1763430f962020-11-24T23:02:57ZengMidwest Public Affairs ConferenceJournal of Public and Nonprofit Affairs2381-37172018-04-0141214010.20899/jpna.4.1.21-4064Nonprofit Economic Development Organizations and the Institutional Arrangement of Local Economic DevelopmentWilliam Hatcher0Augustine Hammond1Augusta UniversityAugusta UniversityIn the United States, local economic development is increasingly being managed by nonprofit organizations. However, the institutional arrangement of local economic development is an understudied topic in the scholarly literature on nonprofit management and leadership. This paper examines why communities select nonprofits to manage economic development and the effect this institutional arrangement has on local development policy. We hypothesize that the form of local government and the population size of a community are variables affecting the likelihood that a community will select a nonprofit organization for economic development. Additionally, we argue that nonprofit organizations manage economic development differently than agencies directly controlled by local governments. Thus, organizational types influence economic development policy outcomes. To examine the paper’s hypotheses, we use data from the International City/County Management Association’s (ICMA) 2014 economic development survey. The paper’s analysis provides evidence that smaller cities, compared with larger communities, are more likely to select nonprofit organizations to manage economic development, and it appears the selection of a nonprofit to manage economic development influences the type of development tools used by communities.http://www.jpna.org/index.php/jpna/article/view/134Local Economic DevelopmentNonprofit Economic Development Organizations
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author William Hatcher
Augustine Hammond
spellingShingle William Hatcher
Augustine Hammond
Nonprofit Economic Development Organizations and the Institutional Arrangement of Local Economic Development
Journal of Public and Nonprofit Affairs
Local Economic Development
Nonprofit Economic Development Organizations
author_facet William Hatcher
Augustine Hammond
author_sort William Hatcher
title Nonprofit Economic Development Organizations and the Institutional Arrangement of Local Economic Development
title_short Nonprofit Economic Development Organizations and the Institutional Arrangement of Local Economic Development
title_full Nonprofit Economic Development Organizations and the Institutional Arrangement of Local Economic Development
title_fullStr Nonprofit Economic Development Organizations and the Institutional Arrangement of Local Economic Development
title_full_unstemmed Nonprofit Economic Development Organizations and the Institutional Arrangement of Local Economic Development
title_sort nonprofit economic development organizations and the institutional arrangement of local economic development
publisher Midwest Public Affairs Conference
series Journal of Public and Nonprofit Affairs
issn 2381-3717
publishDate 2018-04-01
description In the United States, local economic development is increasingly being managed by nonprofit organizations. However, the institutional arrangement of local economic development is an understudied topic in the scholarly literature on nonprofit management and leadership. This paper examines why communities select nonprofits to manage economic development and the effect this institutional arrangement has on local development policy. We hypothesize that the form of local government and the population size of a community are variables affecting the likelihood that a community will select a nonprofit organization for economic development. Additionally, we argue that nonprofit organizations manage economic development differently than agencies directly controlled by local governments. Thus, organizational types influence economic development policy outcomes. To examine the paper’s hypotheses, we use data from the International City/County Management Association’s (ICMA) 2014 economic development survey. The paper’s analysis provides evidence that smaller cities, compared with larger communities, are more likely to select nonprofit organizations to manage economic development, and it appears the selection of a nonprofit to manage economic development influences the type of development tools used by communities.
topic Local Economic Development
Nonprofit Economic Development Organizations
url http://www.jpna.org/index.php/jpna/article/view/134
work_keys_str_mv AT williamhatcher nonprofiteconomicdevelopmentorganizationsandtheinstitutionalarrangementoflocaleconomicdevelopment
AT augustinehammond nonprofiteconomicdevelopmentorganizationsandtheinstitutionalarrangementoflocaleconomicdevelopment
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