Burlingame, D.
(Ed.). (1992). The responsibilities of wealth. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
2.
Colwell, A. C.
(1993). Private foundations and public policy: The political role of philanthropy. New York: Garland.
3.
Ettling, J.
(1981). The germ of laziness: Rockefeller philanthropy and public health in the new south. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
4.
Frumkin, P.
(1997). Review: Narcissism and philanthropy and "The billions of dollars that make things worse". Nonprofit & Voluntary Sector Quarterly, 26(2), 247-251.
5.
Hall, P. D.
(1992). Inventing the nonprofit sector and other essays on philanthropy, voluntarism, and nonprofit organizations. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
6.
Himmelstein, J.
(1995). Review of Anna Culleton Colwell, Private foundations and public policy: The political role of philanthropy, Ross Ballant, The coors connection, Althea Nagai, Robert Lemer, & Stanley Rothman, The culture of philanthropy, foundations, and public policy, and Althea Nagai, Robert Lemer, & Stanley Rothman, Giving for social change: Foundations, public policy, and the American political agenda. Nonprofit & Voluntary Sector Quarterly, 24(2), 167-171.
7.
Karl, B.
(1997). Going for broke: The historian's commitment to philantropy. Speech made at the Philantropy in History Conference, Sept. 25-26, Indianapolis, IN.
8.
Lagemann, E. C.
(1983). Private power for the public good: A history of the Carnegie Foundation for the advancement of teaching. Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press.
9.
Lagemann, E. C.
(1989). The politics of knowledge: The Carnegie Corporation, philanthropy, and public policy. Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press.
10.
Lindemann, E. C.
(1936). Wealth and culture: A study of one hundred foundations and community trusts and their operations during the decade 1921-1930. New York: Harcourt Brace.
11.
Nagai, A. K.
, Lemer, R., & Rothamn, S. (1994). Giving for social change: Foundations, public policy and the American political agenda. Westport, CT: Praeger.
12.
Skocpol, T.
(1992). Protecting soldiers and mothers: The political origins of social policy in the United States. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
13.
You could give Uncle Sam a hand
. [Special issue]. (1997, May/June). Foundation News & Commentary, 38(3).