Output list
Conference paper
Nonprofit governance: The shape of board organisation communication
Published 2015
Managing for Peak Performance, 29th Annual ANZAM conference, 02/12/2015–04/12/2015, Queenstown, New Zealand
This qualitative study investigated corporate governance and management practices, with a particular focus on communications between the board and senior management, in two disability service organisations in the nonprofit sector. Fifteen interviewees participated across the two case studies and their insights and contributions were thematically analysed. Among the key findings was a significant contrast in communication processes across the two organisations. In one, communications were tightly controlled by the CEO (hourglass-shaped approach) and, in the second, there was a more accessible communication process between the board and senior management. This paper explores these two communication models.
Conference paper
No Money – No Mission. Can non-profit organisations afford to advocate?
Published 2014
12th Biennial Australian and New Zealand Third Sector Research Conference: Resilience, Change and the Third Sector, 18/11/2014–20/11/2014, Otautahi/Christchurch, New Zealand
Conference paper
Volunteers as social activists – Making a difference
Published 2014
23rd IAVE (International Association for Volunteer Effort) World Volunteer Conference, 17/09/2014–20/09/2014, Gold Coast, Qld, Australia
Conference paper
Building a community of scholars: Positive relationships in a holding environment
Published 2012
26th Annual Australian and New Zealand Academy of Management Conference: Managing for Volatility and Instability, 05/12/2012–07/12/2012, Perth, Western Australia
Academic staff in Australian universities are experiencing significant change, generating stress and anxiety. Caught up in these emotions, individuals seek the means to manage them. Kahn (2001) suggests that an appropriate means for management of negative affect is a holding environment. A ‘collective auto-ethnography’, this paper describes the holding environment constructed by a group of academics focussing on interpersonal relationships which are at the core of the Community of Scholars (Goodman 1964). It offers evidence that the holding environment created by this mutual collaboration between like-minded people has served to provide support for those involved. A holding environment may be an option to be considered by others facing dynamic change.
Conference paper
The changing face of governance: Preliminary results from two case studies in Western Australia
Published 2011
National Conference on Volunteering 2011. Inspire, Challenge, Influence, 28/11/2011–30/11/2011, Gold Coast, Qld, Australia