Are we on the same page? Individual interpretations of missions within human service nonprofits

David Berlan, Sungdae Lim, Portia Diñoso Campos
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Abstract

Without unique missions to serve a public purpose, nonprofits have no justification to exist. Much of the focus on mission in scholarship centers on concerns with mission drift and pressures from external actors. Yet internal dynamics may be just as important in developing a common mission and the coherent activities pursuing it. This research identifies the structural forces shaping organizational members' individual mission conceptions and leading them to emulate and converge around a shared dominant conception. We apply the concept of institutional isomorphism to 104 interviews conducted with staff, managers, board members, and volunteers from 14 human services nonprofits and explain the isomorphic pathways of individuals adopting dominant mission conceptions. Employing qualitative comparative analysis, we analyze the interviews capturing various combinations of individual backgrounds, motivations for joining the organization, and language used to share the mission with others. We find the presence of seven isomorphic pathways leading nonprofit professionals to adopt the dominant interpretations.
我们的观点一致吗?人类服务非营利组织内对使命的个人理解
如果没有服务于公共目的的独特使命,非营利组织就没有存在的理由。学术界对使命的关注大多集中在对使命漂移和外部压力的担忧上。然而,内部动力对于制定共同使命和开展协调一致的活动可能同样重要。本研究确定了影响组织成员个人使命观念的结构性力量,并引导他们效仿和趋同于共同的主导观念。我们将机构同构的概念应用于 104 个访谈中,访谈对象包括来自 14 个非营利性人类服务机构的员工、管理人员、董事会成员和志愿者,并解释了个人采用主导使命概念的同构路径。通过定性比较分析,我们对访谈内容进行了分析,捕捉到了个人背景、加入组织的动机以及与他人分享使命时所用语言的各种组合。我们发现,有七种同构途径导致非营利组织专业人员采用主流解释。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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