ABSTRACT

For the first time since 1601, a number of leading common law nations have almost simultaneously chosen to revise and place on the statute books the law relating to charity. The Politics of Charity examines the reasons for this and for the varying legislative outcomes.

This book examines the legal framework and political significance of charity, as developed within England & Wales, contrasts this with the experiences of other common law nations and explores the resulting implications for government/sector relationships in those countries. It suggests that charity law lies at the heart of the relationship between government and the non profit sector, that there is an unmistakeable political agenda driving charity law reform and that the differential in legislative outcomes reflects important differences in the policies pursued by the governments concerned.

Looking at fundamentally different approaches of government towards the sector in the UK, Ireland, the US, New Zealand, Canada, Singapore and Australia, O’Halloran argues the results will have implications for the present workings of parliamentary democracy.

The Politics of Charity will be a valuable resource for academics, regulators and legal practitioners as well as advanced and postgraduate students in law, politics and public policy.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

part |94 pages

Charity, politics and the law

chapter |21 pages

Charity

Concept, social construct and structures

chapter |24 pages

Charity and law

chapter |23 pages

Charity and politics

chapter |24 pages

Parameters for charity

part |90 pages

Government and charity

chapter |22 pages

The partnership model

chapter |24 pages

Transitional states

chapter |25 pages

The open market model

The US

part |25 pages

Regulating charitable activity

chapter |4 pages

Conclusion