Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
M. Foster, Agnes Meinhard (2009)
A Contingency View of the Responses of Voluntary Social Service Organizations in Ontario to Government CutbacksCanadian Journal of Administrative Sciences-revue Canadienne Des Sciences De L Administration, 19
P. Cloke, S. Johnsen, J. May (2005)
Exploring Ethos? Discourses of ‘Charity’ in the Provision of Emergency Services for Homeless PeopleEnvironment and Planning A, 37
Laura Leete (2000)
Wage equity and employee motivation in nonprofit and for-profit organizationsJournal of Economic Behavior and Organization, 43
M. Douglas (1994)
Risk and Blame: Essays in Cultural Theory
Patricia Wittberg, R. Allahyari (2000)
Visions of Charity: Volunteer Workers and Moral CommunitySociology of Religion, 63
P. Thomas, J. Shields, B. Evans (2000)
Shirking the State: Globalization and Public Administration "Reform"Canadian Public Policy-analyse De Politiques, 26
(2005)
Go for it!' Toward a critical realist approach to voluntary risktaking. Health, risk & society
Chris. Miller (1998)
Canadian Non‐Profits in Crisis: The Need for ReformSocial Policy & Administration, 32
(2002)
The Third Sector: Neo-liberal Restructuring, Governance and the Re-making of State-Civil Society Relationships
J. Karabanow (1999)
When Caring Is Not Enough: Emotional Labor and Youth Shelter WorkersSocial Service Review, 73
Martyn Jones (2000)
Hope and despair at the front lineInternational Social Work, 43
D. Baines (2004)
Losing the "Eyes in the Back of Our Heads": Social Service Skills, Lean Caring, and ViolenceThe Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
(2005)
Go for it!’ Toward a critical realist approach to voluntary risktaking
(2001)
From Medicare to home care: Globalization, state retrenchment, and the profitization of Canada’s health care system
J. Parker, H. Stanworth (2005)
‘Go for it!’ Towards a critical realist approach to voluntary risk-takingHealth, Risk & Society, 7
D. Holness, Sean Somerville, A. Kosny, Janet Gadeski, John Mastandrea, G. Sinclair (2004)
Workplace health and safety concerns in service organizations in the inner cityJournal of Urban Health, 81
J. Cheek (2004)
At the Margins? Discourse Analysis and Qualitative ResearchQualitative Health Research, 14
B. Taylor, M. Donnelly (2006)
Risks to home care workers: Professional perspectivesHealth, Risk & Society, 8
All names are pseudonyms and certain details have been changed to ensure anonymity
All had at least one site located in the 'inner city
J. Aronson, Neysmith Sm (1996)
The work of visiting homemakers in the context of cost cutting in long-term care.Canadian journal of public health = Revue canadienne de sante publique, 87 6
(1990)
Grounded theory method: Procedures, canons, and evaluative criteria
(2001)
A decade of decline: Poverty and income inequality in the city of Toronto in the 1990s. United Way of Greater Toronto and the Canadian Council on Social Development
Y. Hasenfeld (2009)
Human Services as Complex Organizations
S. Davis, Amanda Deliman, Breanya Hogue (2019)
Critical Discourse AnalysisResearch Methods for Classroom Discourse
A. Strauss, B. Glaser (1967)
The Discovery of Grounded Theory
Non-profit organizations play an important role in the provision of health and social services. No longer temporary providers of emergency services, non-profit organizations appear to be permanent features of the social service landscape. Despite some of the intrinsic rewards that work in non-profit organizations offers, jobs in these organizations can be characterized by high demands, long working hours, low pay and exposure to violence and infectious disease, conditions which may be deleterious to worker health. This paper is based on an ethnography of three non-profit organizations: a homeless women's drop in, a drug treatment agency and a men's homeless shelter. We examine organizational ‘mission,’ a dominant discourse about the purpose and value of providing ‘help’ to marginalized clients, and the implications it has for work practices and for the way that workers understand work-related risk in these organizations. We describe how the notion of mission is continually reproduced, and trace its relationship to worker risk acceptance and risk taking. We suggest that the functions of such discursive commitments in organizations, and their implications for the well-being of workers, underscores the importance of understanding organizational culture and the social construction of risk when attempting to improve working conditions and protect worker health in social service non-profit organizations.
"Health, Risk & Society" – Taylor & Francis
Published: Apr 1, 2008
Keywords: risk; social services; non-profit organizations; occupational health and safety; mission
Read and print from thousands of top scholarly journals.
Already have an account? Log in
Bookmark this article. You can see your Bookmarks on your DeepDyve Library.
To save an article, log in first, or sign up for a DeepDyve account if you don’t already have one.
Copy and paste the desired citation format or use the link below to download a file formatted for EndNote
Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
All DeepDyve websites use cookies to improve your online experience. They were placed on your computer when you launched this website. You can change your cookie settings through your browser.