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LITERATURE ON CHARITY IN VIETNAM

LITERATURE ON CHARITY IN VIETNAM

Barzin, Y. (2012). "The role of NGOs in rural Vietnam: a case study and critique." from http://www.biomedcentral.com/1753-6561/6/S4/P54.

No abstract available.

Bui, T. H. (2013). "The development of civil society and dynamics of governance in Vietnam's one party rule." Global Change, Peace & Security 25(1): 77-93.

Civil society has been in operation under one-party rule in Vietnam in the years since the Doi Moi (renewal) in 1986. Despite the continued monopoly of political power by the Communist Party of Vietnam (CPV), civil society has been gradually expanded and developed. The paper reviews recent arguments in the political science and area studies literature on the emergence of civil society in Vietnam's Doi Moi period over the past two decades, to comment on the dynamics of the relationship between civil society and the party-state, problematizing the development of civil society in the context of a one-party-dominated state. At a certain level, civil society has been ?tolerated?, ?endorsed?, or recognized by the party state to fill a gap in the governance network. In practice, it has never been an easy project for civil society to make its way into Vietnamese society given the party-state's Gramscian concession to maintain the existing hegemony.

Center for Community Development (2012). Memorandum: Fundraising activities by Not-for-profit organisations under Vietnamese law. Ho Chi Minh City, Centre of community development.

Center for Community Development (2012). Philanthropic attitudes & sentiments in Vietnam today. Ho Chi Minh City, LIN - Center for Community Development.

Dalton, R. J. and N.-N. T. Ong (2005). "Civil society and social capital in Vietnam." Modernization and Social Change in Vietnam. Hamburg, Institut für Asienkunde.

Gillespie, J. and N. Penelope (2005). Asian socialism & legal change : the dynamics of Vietnamese and Chinese reform. Canberra ACT, Australian National University E Press : Asia Pacific Press.

Goodkind, D. (1996). "State Agendas, Local Sentiments: Vietnamese Wedding Practices amidst Socialist Transformations." Social Forces 75(2): 717-742.

This article examines how Vietnamese citizens responded to state exhortations to devalue and simplify marital exchanges. Such exhortations reflected Engels' belief ([1884] 1972) that the success of revolutionary socialism was contingent upon a transformation of marital institutions. Vietnam, a "weak" state with an otherwise home-grown socialist revolution, announced decrees to this end in the North after national partition in 1954 and in the South following political reunification in 1975. This article employs data from the author's 1993 field survey in a Northern and Southern province to track temporal changes in a variety of Vietnamese wedding practices. The results suggest that the socialist marriage pattern took hold in the Northern province only. Findings are linked to historical events, modernization, state-society bargaining processes, as well as the more general successes and failures of revolutionary socialism in Vietnam.

Gray, M. L. (1999). "Creating civil society? : the emergence of NGOs in Vietnam." Development and change. 304: 693-713.

Hamm, B. (2012). "Corporate Social Responsibility in Vietnam: Integration or mere adaptation?" Pacific News 38(July/August).

Heurlin, C. (2010). "Governing Civil Society: The Political Logic of NGO-State Relations Under Dictatorship." Voluntas: International Journal of Voluntary and Nonprofit Organizations 21(2): 220-239.

This paper attempts to take the first steps toward developing a theory of non-governmental organizations (NGO)-state relations under dictatorship. Drawing on evidence from East Asia, the author argues that dictatorships typically employ one of two strategies in attempting to govern NGOs. First, some dictatorships follow a corporatist strategy, in which business associations, development, and social welfare organizations are co-opted into the state and controlled through a variety of strategies. Second, other dictatorships pursue an exclusionary strategy in which NGOs are marginalized and replaced with state institutions. Variation in the strategy chosen may be explained by differing levels of elite competition and the type of development strategy. Single-party states tend to regulate elite conflicts better and thus often choose corporatist strategies. In personalist regimes dictators tend to fear the organizational and mobilizational potential of NGOs and thus tend to pursue exclusionary strategies. This choice, however, is conditioned by the development strategy employed, as socialist development strategies reduce the incentives to allow NGOs.

Hugman, R., et al. (2009). "Developing Social Work in Vietnam: Issues in Professional Education." Social Work Education 28(2): 177-189.

The growth of professional social work in Vietnam took a major step forward in 2004, with the approval of a new national curriculum for universities to teach degrees in social work. This article briefly examines the history of social work in Vietnam to provide background to these developments and then examines key questions facing Vietnamese social work education. These include issues of how professional education for social work is structured and integrated within universities, how social work educators are appropriately trained and how practicum opportunities are developed in a context where a formal profession of social work is still emerging. It is argued that while Vietnamese social work education must be understood as part of the global range of approaches to professional training, it is also vital for Vietnam to engage with the process of developing an authentic Vietnamese approach.

Kauffman, C. J. (2005). "Politics, Programs, and Protests: Catholic Relief Services in Vietnam, 1954-1975." The Catholic Historical Review The Catholic Historical Review 91(2): vi, 223-250.

Marshall, V.-N. (2009). "Tools of Empire? Vietnamese Catholics in South Vietnam." from http://id.erudit.org/iderudit/044402ar.

This article examines the social and political activities of Vietnamese Roman Catholics in South Vietnam in the period from the 1950s to the 1970s. The Catholics participation in the public sphere, ranging from joining humanitarian organizations to organizing street protests, suggests that they were highly organized and proactive in trying to change their social and political environment. While Catholics held some political views and goals in common with the South Vietnamese and the United States governments, they pursued their own objectives, engaged in local and national politics, critiqued government policy, and maintained an important degree of independence from state power and influence.

Nguyen Vo Thuc Quyen (2013). Corporate Social Responsibility Implementation by Vietnamese Enterprises : case: Vinamilk Corp. & Kinh Do Corp. International Business. Lahti, Lahden ammattikorkeakoulu. Bachelor: 63.

While the application of corporate social responsibility (CSR) into business for sustainable development is becoming a popular trend in developed countries, this issue is considered relatively new to developing countries, particularly in Vietnam. In addition, CSR studies conducted in Vietnam remain very scarce. Most of the enterprises do not have adequate understandings of CSRs aspects, but the meaning of philanthropy. Hence, the thesis aims at examining the current understandings and implementation of CSR by Vietnamese enterprise. The theoretical framework provides readers an overview of CSR issue, including definition, three CSR models, and followed by an analysis of CSR in developing countries. The empirical part covers two large-listed company case studies as Vinamilk Corp. and Kinh Do Corp.The case studies present several CSR practices in four recent years, from 2009-2012, and reveal the achieved results.Using the inductive reasoning, together with the Qualitative research method, the thesis focuses on content analysis based on companies reports, websites, personal observation, and half-structured interviews with staff from two companies. In conclusion, the collected data from case studies are compared and collated to research question answers. The study findings state that Vietnamese enterprises have a greater perception of sustainable development in implementing corporate social responsibility practices.

Oanh, N. T. (2002). "Historical development and characteristics of social work in today's Vietnam." International Journal of Social Welfare 11(1): 84-91.

Sidel, M. (1997). "The emergence of a voluntary sector and philanthropy in Vietnam: functions, legal regulation and prospects for the future." Voluntas: International Journal of Voluntary and Nonprofit Organizations 8(3): 283-302.

A significant number and wide range of Vietnamese non-profit and voluntary organisations have developed since Vietnam embarked on a programme of economic reform in late 1986. Philanthropy has begun to grow as well, albeit more slowly. The non-profit and voluntary sector and the state, each face important challenges as development of the sector accelerates. The state has sought both to encourage growth of non-profit, voluntary and philanthropic institutions, but also to control the pace and directions of that growth. Those dual aims are reflected in the state's regulation of the sector since the mid-1980s. This article provides detailed information on the development of the non-profit sector in Vietnam. It examines some common problems many of the new non-profits and voluntary organisations face and discusses the rapidly changing environment for philanthropy in Vietnam. The article also reviews the developing legal environment for non-profits and philanthropy, compares the situation in Vietnam to other countries in transition, and situates the functions of the non-profit sector in Vietnam in the context of the emerging scholarly literature on functions and models of the non-profit sector and government/non-profit relations.

Sidel, M. (2007). Vietnamese-American Diaspora Philanthropy to Vietnam. Harvard, The Philanthropic Initiative, Inc & The Global Equity Inititative, Harvard University.

Analyzes giving by the Vietnamese diaspora in the United States back to Vietnam. Outlines the 1986-2006 evolution of Vietnamese-American philanthropy from individual to organized efforts; challenges; and recommendations for expanding scale and impact.

Sidel, M. (2008). Law and the regulation of civil society: nonprofit organizations, philanthropy, grassroots organizations, and the state. Law and society in Vietnam: The transition from Socialism in Comparative Perspective. M. Sidel. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press: 141-165.

A unique analysis of the struggle to build a rule of law in one of the world's most dynamic and vibrant nations - a socialist state that is seeking to build a market economy while struggling to pursue an ethos of social equality and opportunity. It addresses constitutional change, the assertion of constitutional claims by citizens, the formation of a strong civil society and non-profit sector, the emergence of economic law and the battles over who is benefited by the new economic regulation, labour law and the protection of migrant and export labour, the rise of lawyers and public interest law, and other key topics. Alongside other countries, comparisons are made to parallel developments in another transforming socialist state, the People's Republic of China.

The Asia Foundation (2011). Đóng góp từ thiện tại Việt Nam. Hà Nội, Vietnam Asia Pacìic Center & The Asia Foundation.

UNDP (2007). Khỏa lấp sự cách biệt: Xã hội dân sự mới nổi ở Việt Nam. Hà Nội, UNDP, VUSTA, SNV.