The funding crisis: implications for the survival of human service institutions.

Grants magazine Pub Date : 1982-12-01
A L Ellis, E P Stanford
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Abstract

At a time when human service providers should be priming their technologies to meet the emerging needs of a new age, they appear to be fighting for their very survival. New governmental priorities have reduced the Welfare State to a new level of pauperism, where both public and private services scurry for scarce resources. In the midst of these changes, serious questions emerge regarding who is ultimately responsible. That is, for maintaining acceptable standards of human dignity and rights despite government preoccupation with budget-balancing. Traditional advocates in the form of civil rights community organizations and organized labor groups do not appear to be available for the task. And recent changes in conventional primary group systems such as the family and the neighborhood complicate the matter of identifying appropriate leaders for mobilizing any form of "grass roots" movement. Despite what appears to be a bleak future for the human services, there is little question about their survival. The issue is, in what form and at what level of quality will they survive. If current trends continue, they will most certainly be incapable of meeting even basic human needs in the future. Funding in its current form may be a moot issue. Ultimately, it may be those who are dependent upon service systems who will determine their own survival.

资金危机:对人类服务机构生存的影响。
当人类服务提供商应该准备好他们的技术来满足新时代的新需求时,他们似乎在为自己的生存而战。新的政府优先事项将福利国家降低到一个新的贫困水平,在那里,公共和私人服务都争先恐后地争夺稀缺的资源。在这些变化中,关于谁是最终责任人的严重问题出现了。也就是说,在政府忙于平衡预算的情况下,维持可接受的人类尊严和权利标准。民权社区组织和有组织的劳工团体等传统的倡导者似乎无法胜任这项任务。此外,传统的基层组织体系(如家庭和邻里)最近发生了变化,这使得确定合适的领导人来动员任何形式的“草根”运动的问题复杂化了。尽管人类服务业的前景似乎很黯淡,但它们的生存几乎没有问题。问题是,它们将以何种形式和何种质量水平生存下去。如果目前的趋势继续下去,它们将来肯定无法满足甚至是人类的基本需要。以目前的形式提供资金可能是一个没有实际意义的问题。最终,可能是那些依赖服务系统的人将决定自己的生存。
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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