Habitat for Humanity: Building Private Homes, Building Public Religion by Temple University Press Title: Habitat for Humanity: Building Private Homes, Building Public Religion

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Manufacturer: Temple University Press
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Habitat for Humanity: Building Private Homes, Building Public Religion by Temple University Press

One book support group

As a houseleader and committee member for a Habitat Affliate I found many of my joys and frustrations were address in this book. Well written and candid, it addresses the many points of view that are part of the Habitat Universe. If you are a volunteer or are interested in becoming one this book provides insight on the dynamics and tensions that you'll be dealing with.
Habitat for Humanity: Building Private Homes, Building Public Religion by Temple University Press

Book Description

Habitat for Humanity®, a grassroots house-building ministry founded in 1976 by evangelical Christians, is one of the best-known and most widely popular nonprofit organizations in operation today. With approximately 1500 local Habitat affiliates in the United States and more than 250 abroad in fifty countries, the organization has constructed more than 85,000 homes primarily by mobilizing concerned citizens, who include about 250,000 American volunteers each year.

The author tells the story of Habitat's development and the special fervor it evokes among volunteers and those for whom it builds houses. Through interviews with staff, he also provides a look into the organizational dynamics of Habitat, a non-profit whose religious mission for social change is inevitably affected by the instrumental, bottom-line orientation of the state and the market.

Baggett argues that Habitat is an example of a particular social form of religion, the paradenominational organization, that is uniquely adapted to the climate of the modern world. It is one of the vital forms that voluntarism takes today.


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