Governments and voluntary sector welfare: historians' perspectives.Abstract This paper examines recent themes in the history of welfare as they apply to the relationship between government and the voluntary or non-profit sector The nonprofit sector, also called the third sector, civic sector or voluntary sector, is a third area of an economy, distinct from the public sector and the private sector. It is made up of all of the non-profit organizations in the economy. . These include a shift from a focus on the welfare state to a "mixed economy" or "moving frontier" of welfare, and the emergence of a long-term view that shows a centuries-old contestation between public and private provision for social need. The rehabilitation rehabilitation: see physical therapy. of past philanthropy has helped to reinforce the profile and legitimacy of the voluntary sector in the present, while recent attention to the actual encounters between providers and recipients of welfare has complicated earlier social control theories. Gender studies have illustrated the respective roles of men and women in the different welfare sectors, the voluntary sector providing a sympathetic space in which women, in particular, have attempted to exercise social power. Typologies derived from internationally comparative studies of the non-profit sector have tended to emphasise the complementary nature of its relationship with governments. This paper suggests some distinctive elements in New Zealand's history which shaped such interactions in the past, and which now impose constraints, as well as suggesting pathways for the future. INTRODUCTION In time of rapid administrative change, history and social policy may connect only fleetingly. "The past" tends to be seen as something to disown dis·own tr.v. dis·owned, dis·own·ing, dis·owns To refuse to acknowledge or accept as one's own; repudiate. disown Verb to deny any connection with (someone) Verb , critique or move on from. This may especially be the case where change takes on a dynamic of its own, individuals and groups having a vested interest Vested Interest A financial or personal stake one entity has in an asset, security, or transaction. Notes: For example, if you have a mortgage, your bank has a vested interest on the sale of your house. See also: Right in initiating a new order, but not in appraising and reflecting upon its long-term consequences. History in the form of reflection on the past may be seen as a distraction, an impediment A disability or obstruction that prevents an individual from entering into a contract. Infancy, for example, is an impediment in making certain contracts. Impediments to marriage include such factors as consanguinity between the parties or an earlier marriage that is still valid. to action in the face of immediate pressures. Alternatively, the past may take on the glow of a "golden age". Here myths about a more virtuous (and selectively chosen) past may be used to criticise or justify subsequent developments. Despite its being ignored or misused, historians would argue that their discipline does have a place to play in the making of social policy. Many historical debates have abiding echoes and the solutions of the present may not be as original as we would like to think. A look at the historical record reminds us that discredited ideologies and practices were often implemented by people as well meaning, as convinced of their rightness, and as appalled by their predecessors' actions, as policy makers in the present. History provides, above all, a corrective to assumptions about the easy answer and a basis for better understanding of current dilemmas. This paper reviews historical perspectives on one particular aspect of social policy: the relationship between government and voluntary sector welfare. This seems timely, given a plethora of recent publications about the so-called "contract culture" which became entrenched en·trench also in·trench v. en·trenched, en·trench·ing, en·trench·es v.tr. 1. To provide with a trench, especially for the purpose of fortifying or defending. 2. in the social services social services Noun, pl welfare services provided by local authorities or a state agency for people with particular social needs social services npl → servicios mpl sociales over the last decade and a half. The recent report of the Community and Voluntary Sector Working Party (2001:145) included in its "Phase Two work programme" a call for historical research in the area, and although my focus is the more structured side of such activity, it aims to provide a starting point Noun 1. starting point - earliest limiting point terminus a quo commencement, get-go, offset, outset, showtime, starting time, beginning, start, kickoff, first - the time at which something is supposed to begin; "they got an early start"; "she knew from the for further, more empirical, research. I use the term "voluntary sector" in recognition of its long, though mixed, historical provenance prov·e·nance n. 1. Place of origin; derivation. 2. Proof of authenticity or of past ownership. Used of art works and antiques. . There are other, more recent, contenders for the cluster of attributes evoked by the term; among them the "third sector", as opposed to the "first" and "second" sectors -- the market and the state. (A fourth, "household" sector, is sometimes identified as well.) In Britain, the "non-statutory" sector is the competing terminology, while "non-profit" is more favoured in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. . None of these terms is unproblematic, and each carries an ideological imbalance of one or another kind (Kuhnle and Selle 1992:6). The further one goes back in history, the more problematic all these terms become, including the notion of "sectors", for they assume a demarcation of public and private domains, and an ideological, political and legal infrastructure which differs from that of Western societies in the past (Hall 1994:4-5) and from non-Western societies in the present. Internationally, as Lester Salamon The subject of this article may not satisfy the notability guideline for Biographies. If you are familiar with the subject matter, please expand or rewrite the article to establish its notability. and Helmut Anheier point out, notions of "voluntary" or "non-profit" activity are "culture-bound and dependent on different legal systems" and incorporate "a wild assortment of institutional types that varies greatly in basic composition from place to place" (Salamon and Anheier 1997:495). Here the term "voluntary sector" will be used for national and local personal helping or relief organisations, which are non-profit-distributing (though they may make profits), and voluntary in the sense that involvement in their activity is not forced or mandatory. These may range from highly structured nationally organised bodies to loosely organised community associations, though mutual aid associations such as friendly societies have had a somewhat different historical trajectory. FROM WELFARE STATE TO WELFARE SECTORS A number of themes have emerged in welfare historiography historiography Writing of history, especially that based on the critical examination of sources and the synthesis of chosen particulars from those sources into a narrative that will stand the test of critical methods. in recent years. Until the 1970s, welfare history was very much about the "rise of the welfare state", with a focus on a growing collective humanitarianism hu·man·i·tar·i·an·ism n. 1. Concern for human welfare, especially as manifested through philanthropy. 2. The belief that the sole moral obligation of humankind is the improvement of human welfare. 3. and citizen entitlement to statutory benefits (Bruce 1968, Fraser 1973). Often written with overtones of inevitability and progress, this approach implicitly and explicitly constructed the welfare state as a response to voluntary sector failure. Where historians ventured into international comparisons, they drew on social science models by Wilensky and Lebeaux (1965), Titmuss (1974), Esping Anderson (1990) and others which paid relatively little attention to the role of voluntary welfare (Kuhnle and Selle 1992:12-19). However, historians are not insulated in·su·late tr.v. in·su·lat·ed, in·su·lat·ing, in·su·lates 1. To cause to be in a detached or isolated position. See Synonyms at isolate. 2. from contemporary social and political shifts and, as the so-called "crisis of the welfare state" entered public discourse, their analyses either became less laudatory laud·a·to·ry adj. Expressing or conferring praise: a laudatory review of the new play. laudatory Adjective (of speech or writing) expressing praise Adj. , or explicitly sought to defend the welfare state from a "New Right" attack (Thane thane n. 1. a. A freeman granted land by the king in return for military service in Anglo-Saxon England. b. A man ranking above an ordinary freeman and below a nobleman in Anglo-Saxon England. 2. 1982). At the very least they were forced to write about the welfare state in terms which questioned its inevitability. The term "classic welfare state" began to be used of the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s in particular, and the welfare state was increasingly depicted as part of a distinctive period of history -- as an institution which was complex, contradictory and by no means as total in its reach as had previously been assumed. As a corollary of this, and mirroring its late 20th century expansion, the voluntary sector has acquired a new interest for historians. In place of analyses of the state, notions of a "mixed economy of welfare", "welfare pluralism" and welfare "sectors" have taken hold. The balance of the different sectors is seen as shifting over time, and not inevitably in the direction of state predominance pre·dom·i·nance also pre·dom·i·nan·cy n. The state or quality of being predominant; preponderance. Noun 1. predominance - the state of being predominant over others predomination, prepotency . In one particularly influential article, British historian Roderick Findlayson wrote of a "moving frontier" of welfare between voluntarism voluntarism Metaphysical or psychological system that assigns a more predominant role to the will (Latin, voluntas) than to the intellect. Christian philosophers who have been described as voluntarist include St. Augustine, John Duns Scotus, and Blaise Pascal. and the state over the 20th century; an "ideological front" influenced by war and want, but constantly being reassessed and renegotiated (Findlayson 1990). In New Zealand New Zealand (zē`lənd), island country (2005 est. pop. 4,035,000), 104,454 sq mi (270,534 sq km), in the S Pacific Ocean, over 1,000 mi (1,600 km) SE of Australia. The capital is Wellington; the largest city and leading port is Auckland. there have been some fine studies completed in recent years of social policy sections of government (McClure 1998, Dalley 1998, Bassett 1998, Dow 1995). For the most part these have touched only in passing on the relationship between government and the voluntary sector in different welfare environments, though they do give an indication of the government's expanding regulatory role. There are relatively few "lifecycle" studies of voluntary organisations. Those which do exist focus largely on national societies, are of varying quality and, understandably, do not foreground relations with government. Analyses of the relationship by social scientists sometimes contain a historical section as a kind of "introductory overture" to their real performance piece: the recent past and the emergence of the so-called "contract culture" (Social Advisory Council 1986, Ellis 1994, Nowland-Foreman 1995). A LONGER-TERM VIEW While Findlayson wrote about this "moving frontier" in relation to the 20th century, many historians urge an even longer-term view of welfare. Family history and studies of the Poor Law in Britain have generated an argument that "the history of provision for the poor over the past three centuries or more has to be seen as one of constant shifts in relationships and the balance of provision among central and local government, charity, kin, and informal neighbourhood support" (Thane 1989:96). Such studies have tended to focus on the elderly as a consistently vulnerable group over time, but they also have general implications for the present: they suggest a cyclical view of welfare is more appropriate than one which focuses only on the welfare state and they show a centuries-long contestation about the balance between public and private welfare. David Thomson, a specialist in British as well as New Zealand history, is the main exponent exponent, in mathematics, a number, letter, or algebraic expression written above and to the right of another number, letter, or expression called the base. In the expressions x2 and xn, the number 2 and the letter n of this view in New Zealand. His work on the elderly and my earlier study of the charitable aid system suggest that the cyclical nature of welfare arrangements and the intellectual baggage of an immigrant population are critical to understanding the relationship between public and voluntary forms of welfare in 19th century New Zealand (Thomson 1998b, Tennant 1989). The argument is that organised migration to New Zealand came in the midst Adv. 1. in the midst - the middle or central part or point; "in the midst of the forest"; "could he walk out in the midst of his piece?" midmost of a pendulum swing against public welfare in England. The 1834 report of the British Poor Law Commissioners recommended a tightening up of Poor Law provision for the able-bodied, a more meagre mea·ger also mea·gre adj. 1. Deficient in quantity, fullness, or extent; scanty. 2. Deficient in richness, fertility, or vigor; feeble: the meager soil of an eroded plain. 3. approach, which was later extended even to the elderly poor. The ideals behind this cyclical change in British welfare took more extreme form in colonial New Zealand, where individual effort and family responsibility were lauded even above voluntary charity. Many settlers rejected both public welfare in the form of a poor law and the perceived condescension con·de·scen·sion n. 1. The act of condescending or an instance of it. 2. Patronizingly superior behavior or attitude. [Late Latin cond of philanthropy. Nonetheless, as Thomson also acknowledges, this first version of New Zealand as an anti-welfare experiment was found wanting by the 1880s and 1890s (Thomson 1998b:161). State activism, already a feature of many policy arenas, was soon extended to welfare and, through its old-age pension old-age pension: see pension; social security. and labour policies, New Zealand started to be represented as a "social laboratory" of a different kind. Another pendulum swing began. Our own debates and working parties and our current conceptualisations of the state and the voluntary sector may represent but another turn in a very long and contested process. THE REHABILITATION OF PHILANTHROPY A third historical theme is the rehabilitation of past philanthropy and charitable endeavour, a trend that helps to reinforce the profile and legitimacy of the voluntary sector in the present. From earlier analyses that saw voluntary charity as class-ridden, largely to be interpreted in terms of social control, insensitive pieties and do-gooding ladies (Summers 1979), a more complex and generally more positive view has emerged. This acknowledges altruism altruism (ăl`tr ĭz`əm), concept in philosophy and psychology that holds that the interests of others, rather than of the self, can motivate an individual. and reciprocity reciprocityIn international trade, the granting of mutual concessions on tariffs, quotas, or other commercial restrictions. Reciprocity implies that these concessions are neither intended nor expected to be generalized to other countries with which the contracting parties as well as social control; intra-class as well as across-class transfers. British historian Frank Prochaska has been a major influence here. While acknowledging calculation and social tension in charitable causes, he writes, "It is suggestive to think of the history of philanthropy broadly as the history of kindness" (Prochaska 1990:360). From this perspective, voluntary welfare is grounded in fundamental community impulses and customs, its diversity and even its apparent muddle Muddle - Original name of MDL. making it a "nursery school nursery school, educational institution for children from two to four years of age. It is distinguishable from a day nursery in that it serves children of both working and nonworking parents, rarely receives public funds, and has as its primary objective to promote of democracy"(ibid.:392). Prochaska sees the current resurgence of interest in philanthropy and community action in Britain as a direct and positive legacy of charity past; of those philanthropists "rich or poor, misguided or wise, whose works radiated ra·di·ate v. ra·di·at·ed, ra·di·at·ing, ra·di·ates v.intr. 1. To send out rays or waves. 2. To issue or emerge in rays or waves: Heat radiated from the stove. from the home into the wider world" (ibid.:393). Other historians continue to place more emphasis than Prochaska on the status attributed to charitable acts at different times and in different places, even if they now regard "social control" theories of welfare as assuming a higher level of rational intent and efficacy of outcome than is warranted by historical case studies (Kidd 1996). In New Zealand, earlier charitable activity may have been less in need of rehabilitation, partly because it had a weaker purchase in a colonial society and partly because the class differentials fundamental to images of charitable paternalism paternalism (p n. 1. Unselfish concern for the welfare of others; selflessness. 2. Zoology Instinctive cooperative behavior that is detrimental to the individual but contributes to the survival of the species. view of past philanthropy has been used recently to condemn the "dispassionate dis·pas·sion·ate adj. Devoid of or unaffected by passion, emotion, or bias. See Synonyms at fair1. dis·pas and statist-instrumental approach" which supposedly supplanted it (Gregg 1999:5). In publications by the Business Round Table and the Centre for Independent Studies, voluntary charity in the past is endowed en·dow tr.v. en·dowed, en·dow·ing, en·dows 1. To provide with property, income, or a source of income. 2. a. with a sense of mutual respect, honour and solidarity with others, and a capacity for face-to-face relationships denied the "impersonal" welfare state (Green 1996: 118-20). In the United States one of the first acts of the newly installed President George W. Bush was to set up the White House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives The White House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives (OFBCI) is a department under the Office of the President of the United States that was established by President George W. , on the basis that such ventures are better placed than the state to respond not only to material need but to change hearts and minds (www.whitehouse.gov:2001). In each case, the moral superiority of the voluntary sector is unquestioned. However, by facilitating the transfer of tax revenues to faith-based and community groups, the Bush initiative essentially acknowledged the failure of the free market to solve social problems. In New Zealand the Business Round Table has been strongly opposed to voluntary sector reliance on government grants, urging a return to an earlier, more pristine and "independent" position (Green 1996, Kerr 1999). (This independence was not always apparent to earlier social commentators: Duncan MacGregor, the late 19th century Inspector-General of Hospitals and Charitable Institutions, was infuriated in·fu·ri·ate tr.v. in·fu·ri·at·ed, in·fu·ri·at·ing, in·fu·ri·ates To make furious; enrage. adj. Archaic Furious. by the extent to which voluntary bodies sought government support. Noting that even the churches were "infected" by the expectation of subsidy for their welfare work, he fulminated against "this devil of vicarious vicarious /vi·car·i·ous/ (vi-kar´e-us) 1. acting in the place of another or of something else. 2. occurring at an abnormal site. vi·car·i·ous adj. 1. charity masquerading 1. (networking) masquerading - "NAT" (Linux kernel name). 2. (messaging) masquerading - Hiding the names of internal e-mail client and gateway machines from the outside world by rewriting the "From" address and other headers as the message leaves the as one of the Christian graces" (MacGregor 1898:7).) WELFARE ENCOUNTERS AND THE IMPLEMENTATION OF POLICY The complicating, if not the undermining, of social control theories has been assisted by another theme in the recent history of welfare. This involves a focus on the actual encounter between providers and recipients of social services and sensitivity to the ground-level implementation of policy, not simply its formulation. Drawing upon Foucaultian notions of the dispersed nature of power, this approach is less likely to see welfare beneficiaries as passive and helpless, preferring to acknowledge them as actors in the welfare exchange who sometimes used charities in quite strategic ways (Jones 1996, Van Leeuwen 1994). In part, this was a response to the social history of the 1970s and 1980s, which sought to foreground the experience of those on the bottom of the social heap, and to give them voice. More recently this approach has been informed by anthropological notions of reciprocity in social relations and by cultural studies approaches which regard both the act of giving and the act of receiving welfare as "a cultural performance to be decoded"(Kidd 1996:191). The "theatre" of charity saw both donors and recipients acting out roles expected of them, an activity at which the latter could become quite adept (Kidd 1996:187). Historical case materials and annual reports of charities give insights into the scripts being followed in these encounters, and they were clearly written with particular audiences in mind. Past charity records frequently read as melodrama melodrama [Gr.,=song-drama], originally a spoken text with musical background, as in Greek drama. The form was popular in the 18th cent., when its composers included Georg Benda, J. J. Rousseau, and W. A. Mozart, among others. or morality plays morality play, form of medieval drama that developed in the late 14th cent. and flourished through the 16th cent. The characters in the morality were personifications of good and evil usually involved in a struggle for a man's soul. . The modern scripts inherent in mission statements, annual reports and contracts with government equally involve performances, sometimes with voluntary sector organisers as the supplicants -- though (to extend the metaphor a little too far, perhaps) there may be a fair amount of extemporising by all players in the actual show. To an historian, the point at which "Treaty Principles" and statements about commitments to Maori enter such documents is fascinating, as is the juxtaposition juxtaposition /jux·ta·po·si·tion/ (-pah-zish´un) apposition. jux·ta·po·si·tion n. The state of being placed or situated side by side. , very often, of an older language of charity and modern management idiom (Wood 2000). Given the particular claims of the voluntary sector, past and present, to superior performance in face-to-face encounters with "the needy" (of the past) and "clients" (of today), this perspective is important to any assessment of voluntary organisations and their standing in relation to government services. The Privacy Act and increasing inaccessibility (or destruction) of welfare case materials is making the historian's task of reviewing such performances more difficult in the New Zealand context. Nonetheless, on the government side, some recent studies have suggested that the responses of state social workers in areas such as Child Welfare, Maori Affairs and Social Security may have been more flexible, humane and culturally sensitive than critiques of the 1980s acknowledged (Dalley 1998, Labrum labrum /la·brum/ (la´brum) pl. la´bra [L.] an edge, rim, or lip. la·brum n. pl. la·bra A lip-shaped anatomical edge, rim, or structure. labrum pl. 2000). They also demonstrate, incidentally, that government agencies, like the voluntary sector, are complex entities, not well served by analyses which assume that "the state" is an undifferentiated undifferentiated /un·dif·fer·en·ti·at·ed/ (un-dif?er-en´she-at-ed) anaplastic. un·dif·fer·en·ti·at·ed adj. Having no special structure or function; primitive; embryonic. , monolithic edifice. GENDER AND WELFARE The role of gender in welfare is a fifth historiographical theme that impinges on the relationship between government and voluntary sector welfare. Historians first focused on women's role as consumers rather than producers of welfare, but a number of influential studies in the late 1980s and early 1990s elaborated on women's role in shaping welfare states. Much of this has involved a conceptualisation (artificial intelligence) conceptualisation - The collection of objects, concepts and other entities that are assumed to exist in some area of interest and the relationships that hold among them. of welfare states as either "paternalist" and governed by concerns to protect an adult male labour force, or "maternalist" and focused on support for mothers and children, though there is debate about which forces prevailed in different countries (Koven and Michel 1990, Bock Noun 1. bock - a very strong lager traditionally brewed in the fall and aged through the winter for consumption in the spring bock beer lager beer, lager - a general term for beer made with bottom fermenting yeast (usually by decoction mashing); originally and Thane 1991). New Zealand and Australia have been characterised as "workers' welfare states" where women in their family role were secondary beneficiaries of centralised Adj. 1. centralised - drawn toward a center or brought under the control of a central authority; "centralized control of emergency relief efforts"; "centralized government" centralized wage-fixing systems and a basic minimum wage to workers (Castles 1985). The lens has shifted more recently to the voluntary sector and women's role in the personal social services, to which voluntary organisations have historically laid strong claim. Some especially important work has been done in this context by British historians such as Jane Lewis, who examined the value placed on the personal social services as opposed to the delivery of statutory benefits and social administration. The former are often seen as a female-dominated domain; the latter as largely masculinised over the 20th century. As long as welfare delivery involved local government and voluntary effort, Lewis argues, women had opportunity for influence in Britain. But as welfare became more centralised, the personal social services were marginalised and women's influence on policy reduced (Lewis 1996b). Most recently, she suggests, market principles and the "macho-management" styles of the late 1980s and 1990s have further undermined women's caring work in Britain, at least. Women's history ''This article is about the history of women. For information on the field of historical study, see Gender history. Women's history is the history of female human beings. Rights and equality Women's rights refers to the social and human rights of women. provides a sympathetic context for the notion of a "mixed economy of welfare", for it has long posed challenges to conceptual boundaries. Koven and Michel suggest that women constantly operated in the "borderlands" of political structures, using their authority as mothers to challenge "constructed boundaries between public and private, women and men, state and civil society" (Koven and Michel 1990:1079-1096). The voluntary sector was first seen as a site where women could apply the skills and moral force developed within the home and family to a broader community context. The "extended housekeeping" argument was later used to argue for a voice in state policy. In their personal lives women have often moved from a caring role in the family to an unpaid or paid role in voluntary organisations or government employment: as individuals they have lived the notions of permeability of sectors and moving frontiers. Historically, women's availability for unpaid work has been critical to the fortunes of the voluntary welfare sector (Vicinus 1985). Demography demography (dĭmŏg`rəfē), science of human population. Demography represents a fundamental approach to the understanding of human society. as well as ideology may have restricted benevolent activity in 19th century New Zealand, where women were a minority and where a high proportion of adult women were married and involved in child-rearing. The lack of the "spinster SPINSTER. An addition given, in legal writings, to a woman who never was married. Lovel. on Wills, 269. culture" which sustained so much female charity in Britain restricted the voluntary workforce in this country. Rather than the personal social services becoming marginalised in the early 20th century, as Lewis (1996a) argues for Britain, it may be hypothesised that the personal social services were never established as a strong and viable female domain in the colonial welfare economy (Tennant 1993, Tennant 2000). The early centralisation n. 1. same as centralization. Noun 1. centralisation - the act of consolidating power under a central control centralization consolidation, integration - the act of combining into an integral whole; "a consolidation of two corporations"; of public social services and lesser role of local bodies in New Zealand's social services further restricted female effort, though a number of women's organisations emerged to lobby government in the direct of state activism, especially on "maternalist" issues (Else 1993). In New Zealand and elsewhere the involvement of men as men in welfare services has been little explored by historians. Many have pointed out that men dominated the management and organisation of 19th century charity and Lewis's argument about the British welfare state sees the statutory sector and social administration as a largely male domain over the 20th century (Lewis 1996b). Peter Shapely shape·ly adj. shape·li·er, shape·li·est 1. Having a distinct shape. 2. Having a pleasing shape. shape has examined charity leaders in the city of Manchester over the 19th century, showing how a charitable profile enabled "the Manchester Man" to obtain symbolic power and legitimate domination (Shapely 1998). In New Zealand, it appears that philanthropy was more of an "optional extra" for those seeking social recognition and political power. A reputation for charity never acquired the functional value it had, for a period of time at least, in the British context. Needing more study here are the men of lesser wealth and status whose involvement in welfare was at the "hands on" level, in city missions, prisoners aid societies and youth groups, and male public servants in the welfare sector. To some extent they, too, crossed sectoral boundaries. In New Zealand, as in Britain, men dominated statutory welfare and social administration, but government agencies also used the employees of voluntary organisations to carry out state functions as probation officers probation officer n. 1. An official usually attached to a juvenile court and charged with the care of juvenile delinquents. 2. An official charged with supervising convicts at large on suspended sentence or probation. and official visitors, for example. Many 20th century public servants held positions on the committees of voluntary organisations and gave other, unofficial, forms of support to these bodies. It is a reminder that the relationship between voluntary organisations and government has never simply been a matter of financial transfers: that personnel and other exchanges of services also featured prominently. (2) There is space for an approach that uses collective biographies of male and female welfare workers over time to chart such interactions and movement across welfare boundaries. TYPOGRAPHIES AND GENERALISATIONS While the concept of a "mixed economy of welfare" has been most explicitly elaborated in British historiography, some of the key typographies and theoretical constructions of the non-profit-government relationship have come from the United States, most especially from the Johns Hopkins Noun 1. Johns Hopkins - United States financier and philanthropist who left money to found the university and hospital that bear his name in Baltimore (1795-1873) Hopkins 2. Comparative Nonprofit Sector Project. Voluntary organisations have been characterised as vanguard organisations, as advocates, as value guardians or as service providers, some filling more than one role, and some changing emphasis as they develop (Kramer 1987:242). However, no uniformly acceptable definitions have emerged which would encompass the full range of voluntary effort, from large-scale, service-oriented bureaucracies to small-scale, grassroots activity (Kuhnle and Selle 1992:35) In the United States there has previously been a tendency to see relations between voluntary sector and government within a paradigm of conflict (Salamon 1998). This assumes that an increase in government welfare activity severely damages both the scope and the integrity of the voluntary sector (if funds are transferred from government to voluntary bodies, for example), though research strategies involving international comparisons and historical studies have suggested a more complex relationship (Salamon 1998). This is variously characterised as supplementary, complementary or adversarial ad·ver·sar·i·al adj. Relating to or characteristic of an adversary; involving antagonistic elements: "the chasm between management and labor in this country, an often needlessly adversarial . . . and, some suggest, two or even three of these relationships may be manifested simultaneously (Young 1998). Those writing from an internationally comparative perspective have tended to emphasise the complementary nature of state-voluntary sector relationships, some going as far as to argue that voluntary organisations are part and parcel of the state. Kuhnle and Selle suggest that whether one looks at the least-developed welfare states, such as the United States, or some of the most state-oriented welfare regimes in Scandinavian countries Noun 1. Scandinavian country - any one of the countries occupying Scandinavia Scandinavian nation European country, European nation - any one of the countries occupying the European continent , "the state cannot be looked upon as an agent which has actively destroyed and weakened alternative social security nets such as voluntary organizations" (Kuhnle and Selle 1992:2). For them the question is rather one of what patterns of cooperation existed in different national contexts over time. Attempts to derive cross-national comparisons and models from detailed empirical local histories of voluntary activity have been only partially successful, but point to greater complexity than earlier, predominantly economic models implied. Advocating a "social origins" approach, Salamon and Anheier (1998) conclude that: The nonprofit sector [is not] an isolated phenomenon floating freely in social space, but ... an integral part of a social system whose role and scale are a by-product of a complex set of historical forces. (p.245) The relationship between the state and the voluntary or non-profit sector is seen as influenced by the type of regulatory regime in existence, for example by the degree of decentralisation n. 1. same as decentralization. Noun 1. decentralisation - the spread of power away from the center to local branches or governments decentralization spreading, spread - act of extending over a wider scope or expanse of space or time of the welfare states as they developed, by federalism federalism. 1 In political science, see federal government. 2 In U.S. history, see states' rights. federalism Political system that binds a group of states into a larger, noncentralized, superior state while allowing them and the role of local authorities, and the religio-political configuration of societies. (The close historical role of the Catholic Church in some European countries is an issue here, sometimes limiting the development of secular organisations.) A distinction has been drawn between countries with a common law system, and those governed by civil law. Where a codified cod·i·fy tr.v. cod·i·fied, cod·i·fy·ing, cod·i·fies 1. To reduce to a code: codify laws. 2. To arrange or systematize. civil law exists, it is suggested, the definition of organisations providing a permissible public good are likely to be tightly designated; in common law countries the field is more open and an evolving case law defines what the community perceives over time as a "public good" (Salamon and Anheier 1997:498-9). Factors Shaping the Relationship Between the New Zealand Government and the Voluntary Sector While a start has been made on analysing the voluntary sector in countries beyond Europe and the United States, Australasia has not featured greatly in recent collections. This is not the place for a survey of the voluntary sector in New Zealand, but certain key factors may be seen as shaping the relationship between government and voluntary welfare here. First, New Zealand was a settler colony, influenced by British common law legal traditions and models of voluntary activity, though not simply mirroring those models. Future research will need to consider both continuities with Britain and differences from the British pattern. As suggested earlier, the time at which organised settlement began in New Zealand was important, coinciding with a pendulum swing against public welfare, yet organised voluntary endeavour also had more limited purchase than in Britain. A second factor is this country's centralised system of government, which enabled welfare policies to be implemented in a less contested way than in many other countries and, I would suggest, promoted an early complementarity com·ple·men·tar·i·ty n. 1. The correspondence or similarity between nucleotides or strands of nucleotides of DNA and RNA molecules that allows precise pairing. 2. of effort. State transfers to benevolent societies were in place by the 1860s, governments showing particular favour in the 19th century to activities promising moral reform and training. The 1885 Hospitals and Charitable Institutions Act gave a statutory basis to such arrangements, guaranteeing a subsidy of one pound (later 24 shillings) to voluntary organisations which incorporated under the Act (Tennant 1989). A third, and associated, factor is New Zealand's small size, which enhanced the personal element in such relationships. Lifecycle studies of organisations will help illuminate the detail of such interactions, as well as the fortunes of organisations once deprived of decisive internal and external promoters and key sponsors within government. Fourth is the presence of a strong and increasingly vocal indigenous population which cut across many of the above elements, especially since the 1970s -- though earlier silences about Maori within both voluntary and government social service agencies are significant in themselves. The 19th century rejection of public welfare which David Thomson identified (Thomson 1998b), the lauding of self-help and initiative over public welfare, and even over voluntary welfare, were predicated on Maori land coming cheaply onto the market. In addition, as international studies have suggested for non-Western countries, the very concept of "volunteerism" beyond the family group becomes complicated in different cultural contexts (Ilchman et al. 1998, Salamon and Anheier 1998). Submissions made to the 2001 Working Party into Community and Voluntary Sector Welfare implied that the whole concept of "voluntary work" may not sit comfortably with Maori culture and values, particularly where it involves notions of working for "others" and a "choice" about doing this (Community and Voluntary Sector Working Party 2001:20). History is fundamental here, for a shift in resources to iwi and Maori-run services grew, in part, from a sense of historical injustice. In this context Maori groups are not simply competitors for government support, but Treaty partners whose relationship with government is complicated by broader political and historical issues (ibid.:viii). CONCLUSIONS The very definition of a "voluntary" organisation is currently being renegotiated. Distinctions currently being asserted between large, nationally and bureaucratically bu·reau·crat n. 1. An official of a bureaucracy. 2. An official who is rigidly devoted to the details of administrative procedure. bu organised bodies and small-scale, grassroots (or flaxroots) community organisations may not, however, stand up. Today's "grassroots" organisation may be tomorrow's bureaucracy, or -- given that ephemerality e·phem·er·al adj. 1. Lasting for a markedly brief time: "There remain some truths too ephemeral to be captured in the cold pages of a court transcript" Irving R. Kaufman. is more historically typical of voluntary organisations -- it may fade into future irrelevance ir·rel·e·vance n. 1. The quality or state of being unrelated to a matter being considered. 2. Something unrelated to a matter being considered. Noun 1. , its task completed or superseded. New Zealand's "welfare frontier", like Britain's, has been constantly renegotiated. Changing social, moral and political environments spawned slightly different welfare arrangements, though certain voluntary organisations held onto favoured status with notable tenacity. As the relationship between government and the voluntary welfare sector comes under scrutiny in the 21st century we will see that it results from a combination of minute personal interactions and complex historical forces, some unique to this country and some more general. The personal element raises questions about the whole notion of welfare "sectors" and, at the very least, shows the permeability of welfare boundaries over time. Here, as elsewhere, the patterns of the past are likely to impose constraints as well as suggesting possibilities for the present and future. (1) Correspondence: m.a.tennant@massey.ac.nz (2) Conclusions on the New Zealand situation draw on current research using the archives of social service departments of government and of selected voluntary organisations. As emphasised elsewhere in this article, the importance of such personal interactions is striking in the New Zealand context. REFERENCES Anheier, H. and W. Siebel (1990) The Third Sector: Comparative Studies of Nonprofit Organizations Nonprofit Organization An association that is given tax-free status. Donations to a non-profit organization are often tax deductible as well. Notes: Examples of non-profit organizations are charities, hospitals and schools. , Walter de Gruyter, Berlin, New York Berlin is a town in Rensselaer County, New York, United States. The population was 1,901 at the 2000 census. 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