Digital Commons Network:
The Digital Commons Network brings together free, full-text scholarly articles from hundreds of universities and colleges worldwide. Curated by university librarians and their supporting institutions, the Network includes a growing collection of peer-reviewed journal articles, book chapters, dissertations, working papers, conference proceedings, and other original scholarly work. Open Access Courses/Courseware:
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The Digital Commons Network brings together free, full-text scholarly articles from hundreds of universities and colleges worldwide. Curated by university librarians and their supporting institutions, the Network includes a growing collection of peer-reviewed journal articles, book chapters, dissertations, working papers, conference proceedings, and other original scholarly work. Open Access Courses/Courseware:
- Online Nonprofit Organization and Management Development Program : This nonprofit organization development program consists of 13 modules and can help you accomplish a great deal for your nonprofit -- and for you. This program can be implemented by service organizations to promptly provide a nonprofit and management development program in their locale -- this program can be adopted "as is" or modified.
- Adapting Evaluation for Local Contexts in a Globalized World: This e-study gathers resources for practitioners who seek to design and implement culturally responsive evaluations.
- Campaigns and Organizations
- Principles of Management
- Principles of Marketing
- The Marketing Led Organization
- Population, Urbanization, and the Environment
- Statistics for Psychosocial Research: Structural Models
- Statistics in Psychosocial Research: Measurement
- Research methods in Social Sciences
- Guidelines for Improving the Effectiveness of Boards of Directors of Nonprofit Organizations
- Creating value in the Nonprofit Sector
- Internet_Marketing_textbook.pdf
- Social Science Research: Principles, Methods, and Practices
- What Does It Mean to Be a Nonprofit Educational Measurement Organization in the Twenty-First Century?
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