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The Enter Stage Right Site of the Month Long time readers of ESR should be well aware of the Capital Research Center's existence. Over the past few years, the center has been gracious enough to run some of their work in the pages of this magazine including a recent spotlight regarding the finances of Jesse Jackson's nonprofit empire. For those not familiar with the CRC, it was established in 1984 to study nonprofit organizations like Jackson's Rainbow-PUSH coalition and other groups like unions. Its focus, however, is on "reviving the American traditions of charity, philanthropy, and voluntarism," traditions under attack because of the expansion of government into areas formally the concern of individual citizens and communities.
In order to study the thousands of ostensibly nonprofit groups that have sprang up since the launch of Lyndon B. Johnson's Great Society, the center produces an impressive array of monthly news letters that concentrate their focus on advocacy organizations, trends in philanthropy, charities, unions, private foundations and the effectiveness of charity in general. It's an impressive amount of work that they do and it is reflected in the broad range of subjects the group has shined its spotlight on. In the recent past, the center has reported on how the tactics used against the tobacco companies were also used on the firearms industry, the welfare reform process, the WTO demonstrations in Seattle, the decline of the labour movement and potential problems cropping up at the group Mothers Against Drunk Driving. While the CRC may not hold the monopoly in the study of charities and
nonprofit groups, it does a very effective job and is justifiably considered
one of the leaders in the field. With George W. Bush's recent announcement
that he wants private charities to take a larger role in society, the
CRC's work can only become more important and you should take the time
and check out them out. |
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