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Settlement Houses Under Siege

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Settlement Houses Under Siege: The Struggle to Sustain Community Organizations in New York City examines the past, present, and future of the settlement house in particular and nonprofit community-...
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  • 27 March 2002
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Settlement Houses Under Siege: The Struggle to Sustain Community Organizations in New York City examines the past, present, and future of the settlement house in particular and nonprofit community-based services as a whole. Too often viewed as an artifact of the Progressive era, the settlement house remains today, in a variety of guises, a vital instrument capable of strengthening the social capital of impoverished communities. Yet it has been under attack in recent years, particularly in New York City. Cutbacks in social service funding at federal, state, and local levels during the late 1990s left many nonprofit agencies in an essentially untenable position, dependent on a public sector interested primarily in cutting costs. Both this trend and a concomitant shift to privatization continue today, challenging the flexibility and creativity of social service administrators and undermining neighborhoods and community organizations.

The findings contained in this book extend well beyond just settlement houses. The tension between the ever more restrictive business practices required by government contracts and the provision of effective social services is a powerful trend in the larger world of nonprofit agencies. Michael B. Fabricant and Robert Fisher offer a ground-level exploration of the complexity of developing and implementing a service-based community-building agenda in a hostile climate. Community building, they argue, will be the most important social service work of the twenty-first century. Drawing on more than one hundred interviews with directors and staff members of social service and nonprofit agencies throughout New York City, Settlement Houses Under Siege makes the case for a holistic view of the structural pressures confronting poor communities, one that seeks not only to reposition the idea of social service and revision social assets in a conservative age but also to pose important questions about our broader civic life.

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Price: $160.00
Pages: 289
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Publication Date: 27 March 2002
ISBN: 9780231119306
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Social Work
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Fabricant and Fisher's Settlement Houses Under Siege makes a needed contribution to our understanding of community-based settlement houses and the impact their funding sources have had on their capacity to build and strengthen community life.... Fabricant and Fisher are committed to the notion of community building and the story they tell about how much settlements have been forced to retreat from their traditional neighborhood and community building functions and commitments has profound implications. In many ways their message serves as a 'wake-up call' for social group workers...

Michael B. Fabricant is a professor at the Hunter College School of Social Work.

Robert Fisher is director of urban studies and professor of social work at the University of Connecticut.

Part 1: History Matters: Settlements and Not-for-Profit Social Service Financing
2. Privatization, Contracting, and Not-for-Profits Since 1975
Part 2: Contracting and Corporatized Social Services: Voices from the Field
3. Fiscal Instability: Rewriting the Contract
4. Infrastructural Decline
5. The Pressures and Fissures of Social Service Work
6. Scarce Resources: Rationing and Narrowing the Content of Social Services
7. Navigating the Current Fiscal Turbulence While Struggling to Chart a Social Services Future
Part 3: Rethinking the Purposes and Practices of Not-for-Profit Social Services
8. From Corporatized Contracting to Community Building
Appendix: Methodology of the Qualitative Inquiry