Sustaining NonProfit Performance: The Case for Capacity Building and the Evidence to Support It FROM THE PUBLISHER
Paul Light, renowned expert on public service and nonprofit management, strongly argues for capacity-building measures as a way to sustain and improve the efforts of the nonprofit sector. With innovative data and insightful analysis, he demonstrates how nonprofits that invest in technology, training, and strategic planning can successfully advance their goals and restore public faith in their mission and capabilities. He explains the ways in which restoration of that faith is critical to the survival of nonprofits - another important reason for improving and then sustaining performance. Organizations that invest adequately in their infrastructure and long-term planning are the ones that will survive and continue to serve.
SYNOPSIS
Light (public service, New York U.) argues that the nonprofit sector suffers from a persistent underinvestment in its basic organizational infrastructure. Drawing on a national survey, he links capacity building to organizational performance and public confidence. The book is the third volume in Brookings' Nonprofit Effectiveness Project. Annotation ©2004 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR
ACCREDITATION
Paul C. Light is the Paulette Goddard Professor at the Robert F. Wagner
School of Public Service at New York University. He is also a senior
fellow in Governance Studies at the Brookings Institution, where he
founded the Center for Public Service. Light is the author of several
books, among them THE FOUR PILLARS OF HIGH PERFORMANCE, GOVERNMENT'S
GREATEST ACHIEVEMENTS, PATHWAYS TO NONPROFIT EXCELLENCE, and THE TIDES
OF REFORM.