Produktbild: Regulation of Organised Civil Society

Regulation of Organised Civil Society

Fr. 166.00

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

01.06.2009

Verlag

Hart Publishing

Seitenzahl

288

Maße (L/B/H)

24/16.1/2 cm

Gewicht

602 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-84113-800-8

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

01.06.2009

Verlag

Hart Publishing

Seitenzahl

288

Maße (L/B/H)

24/16.1/2 cm

Gewicht

602 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-84113-800-8

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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  • Produktbild: Regulation of Organised Civil Society
  • 1 Introduction
    I. A Brief History of Organised Civil Society
    II. Civil Society and Regulation
    A. England
    B. Australia
    C. Other Noteworthy Reforms
    III. This Book
    IV. A Note on Methodology
    2 Constitution of Civil Society
    I. Sector Model of Society
    A. Private Sector
    B. Public Sector
    C. Informal Sector
    D. Organised Civil Society
    II. Unpacking Civil Society
    A. Legal Definitions
    B. Financial Definition
    C. Economic Activity
    D. Shared Structural Characteristics
    III. Summary
    3 Functions of Civil Society
    I. Market Support
    A. Systemic Activities
    B. Environmental Activities
    II. The Provision of Public Goods
    A.Weisbrod's Theory of Market Failure
    B. Hansmann's Theory of Contract Failure
    C. Challenges to Contract Failure Theory
    D. Levitt's Theory of Government Failure
    E. Salamon's Theory of Voluntary Failure
    F. Public Goods and the Public Benefit Test
    III. The Provision of Private Goods Analogous to Public Goods
    A. Intangible Services
    B. Redistribution of Wealth
    IV. The Facilitation of Political Action
    A. Advocacy of Minority Interests
    B. Accountability of Government
    C. Pluralism and Civic Involvement
    V. The Provision of Cultural Services
    VI. The Facilitation of Self-Determination
    A. Altruism
    B. Mutuality
    C. Ideological Expression
    VII. The Facilitation of Entrepreneurship
    A. Freedon to Innovate
    B. Retention of Control
    C. Civil Society Ethos
    VIII. Summary
    4 Foundations of Civil Society Regulation
    I. Traditional Microeconomic Theories of Regulation
    A. Monopoly Power and Anti-Competitive Behaviour
    B. Excessive Competition
    C. Public Goods
    D. Externalities
    E. Information Deficits and Accountability
    F. Co-ordination and Irregularity of Production
    II. Traditional Social Justifications for Regulation
    A.Windfalls or Economic Rents
    B. Other Social Goals
    III. Justifications Specific to Civil Society
    A. Philanthropic Failure
    B. Challenges to Structural Characteristics
    IV. Limitations of Regulation
    A. Juridification
    B. Contradictory Regulatory Goals
    V. Summary
    5 Boundaries of Regulation
    I. Blurring of Sector Boundaries
    II. Functional Overlap
    A. Organised Civil Society and the Public Sector
    B. Organised Civil Society and the Private Sector
    C. Organised Civil Society and the Informal Sector
    III. Micro Level Sector Interaction
    IV. Macro Level Sector Interaction
    A. Supplementary Relationship
    B. Complementary Relationship
    C. Adversarial Relationship
    D. Protean Nature of Boundary
    E. Social Origins Theory of Civil Society
    F. Impact on Regulation
    V. Summary
    6 Regulation and Legal Definitions of Civil Society
    I. The Charitable Sectors in England and Australia
    A. Structure of the Charitable Sectors
    B. Charitable Purposes
    C. Functions of the Charitable Sectors
    C. Non-Charitable CSOs
    II. The Tax-Exempt Sector in the United States
    A. The Charitable Sector
    B. Non-Charitable Tax-Exempt Organisations
    III. The Limits of Existing CSO Regulation
    A. Non-Traditional Religion
    B. The Prohibition on Political Purposes
    C. Public and Private Benefit
    IV. Summary
    7 Implementing Regulation
    I. Models of Regulation
    A. Regulation by the Legislature
    B. Regulation by the Courts
    C. Regulation by Executive Agency
    D. Regulation by an Official
    E. Supplementing Regulation by the Executive
    II. Strategies of Regulation
    A. Command and Control
    B. Incentive-Based Regulation
    C. Disclosure Requirements
    D. Education and Advice
    III. Summary
    8 Conclusions
    I. Defining 'Regulation' and 'Organised Civil Society'
    II. Towards a Theory of Regulation
    III. Designing and Implementing Regulation