Serving Country and Community: Who Benefits from National Service?
by Peter Frumkin and JoAnn Jastrzab
Harvard University Press, 2010 eISBN: 978-0-674-05635-0 | Cloth: 978-0-674-04678-8 Library of Congress Classification HD4870.U6F78 2010 Dewey Decimal Classification 361.6
ABOUT THIS BOOK | REVIEWS | TOC
ABOUT THIS BOOK
The United States has a long history of citizens rendering service to their communities. Examples of government-sponsored voluntary service organizations include the Civilian Conservation Corps, the Peace Corps, and Volunteers in Service to America (VISTA). During the Clinton administration, the national service movement was advanced by the establishment of AmeriCorps, a large-scale national service program designed to place young people in community service positions across the country. More recently, the Obama administration has set in motion a major program expansion of AmeriCorps over the coming decade.
Many decades, billions of dollars, and hundreds of thousands of volunteers after the creation of the first national service programs, it remains unclear who benefits from service, under what conditions these programs work best, and how exactly these service efforts contribute to the strengthening of communities. Serving Country and Community answers each of these questions through an in-depth study of how service shapes the lives of young people and a careful analysis of the strengths and weaknesses of these programs. Based on years of field work and data collection, Serving Country and Community provides an in-depth examination of the aims and effects of national service and, in the process, opens up a conversation about what works and what needs reform in national service today.
REVIEWS
Who benefits from AmeriCorps, Vista, and National Civilian Community Corps? Frumkin and Jastrzab make important recommendations on how to improve the programs and resolve some of the political and administrative issues which have plagued those initiatives in the past two decades.
-- James Youniss, Catholic University of America
Serving Country and Community is the most definitive effort to date to understand and evaluate the impact of national and community service on individual participants and local communities. Through rigorous research and a very accessible style, the authors have produced a highly informative, timely, and important book with broad implications for future policy, practice, and research.
-- Steven R. Smith, Georgetown Public Policy Institute
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Contents
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1. Visions of National Service
Chapter 2. The Evolution of National Service
Chapter 3. The Shape of National Service Today
Chapter 4 Civic Engagement
Chapter 5. Personal Growth
Chapter 6. Social Capital
Chapter 7. Public Work
Chapter 8. The Institutional Politics of National Service
Serving Country and Community: Who Benefits from National Service?
by Peter Frumkin and JoAnn Jastrzab
Harvard University Press, 2010 eISBN: 978-0-674-05635-0 Cloth: 978-0-674-04678-8
The United States has a long history of citizens rendering service to their communities. Examples of government-sponsored voluntary service organizations include the Civilian Conservation Corps, the Peace Corps, and Volunteers in Service to America (VISTA). During the Clinton administration, the national service movement was advanced by the establishment of AmeriCorps, a large-scale national service program designed to place young people in community service positions across the country. More recently, the Obama administration has set in motion a major program expansion of AmeriCorps over the coming decade.
Many decades, billions of dollars, and hundreds of thousands of volunteers after the creation of the first national service programs, it remains unclear who benefits from service, under what conditions these programs work best, and how exactly these service efforts contribute to the strengthening of communities. Serving Country and Community answers each of these questions through an in-depth study of how service shapes the lives of young people and a careful analysis of the strengths and weaknesses of these programs. Based on years of field work and data collection, Serving Country and Community provides an in-depth examination of the aims and effects of national service and, in the process, opens up a conversation about what works and what needs reform in national service today.
REVIEWS
Who benefits from AmeriCorps, Vista, and National Civilian Community Corps? Frumkin and Jastrzab make important recommendations on how to improve the programs and resolve some of the political and administrative issues which have plagued those initiatives in the past two decades.
-- James Youniss, Catholic University of America
Serving Country and Community is the most definitive effort to date to understand and evaluate the impact of national and community service on individual participants and local communities. Through rigorous research and a very accessible style, the authors have produced a highly informative, timely, and important book with broad implications for future policy, practice, and research.
-- Steven R. Smith, Georgetown Public Policy Institute
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Contents
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1. Visions of National Service
Chapter 2. The Evolution of National Service
Chapter 3. The Shape of National Service Today
Chapter 4 Civic Engagement
Chapter 5. Personal Growth
Chapter 6. Social Capital
Chapter 7. Public Work
Chapter 8. The Institutional Politics of National Service