Case #1491.1

Should It Survive? Charles Dunlap and the National Family Legal Foundation (Epilogue)

Publication Date: October 01, 1998
$2.45
Current Stock:

Educator Access

A review copy of this case is available free of charge to educators and trainers. Please create an account or sign in to gain access to this material.

Permission to Reprint

Each purchase of this product entitles the buyer to one digital file and use. If you intend to distribute, teach, or share this item, you must purchase permission for each individual who will be given access. Learn more about purchasing permission to reprint.

Abstract:
This nonprofit strategic planning case tells the story of the Phoenix-based National Family Legal Foundation, an anti-pornography advocacy group which, after attaining national influence during the 1980s, finds itself, in 1995, nearly bankrupt and without a clear mission. When Charles Dunlap, a local real estate developer, agrees to join the board of directors, he unknowingly takes the first step toward a central role in deciding the fate of NFLF. With little left to work with but a skeleton staff and a small group of committed board members, Dunlap, thrust into a central role, must decide whether there is any way the organization can be effective, given its now-limited resources, or whether the time has come to close up shop.

Learning Objective:
The case allows for several discussions about nonprofit organizations and management, including such topics as the life-cycle of organizations; relations between board members and staff; and the identification of new but related organizational missions. This case was written for potential, but not exclusive, use in conjunction with the book "Half-time: Changing Your Game Plan from Success to Significance," Robert Buford (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan Publishing House, 1997. 208 pages).

Other Details

Case Author:
John Buntin
Faculty Lead:
Christine Letts
Pages (incl. exhibits):
4
Setting:
United States
Language:
English
Funding Source:
Hauser Center for Nonprofit Organizations