With increasing privatization and globalization, government-nonprofit relations are the basic means of social provision. However, there is a dearth of research identifying the role of organizational factors that impact the receipt of government allocations by nonprofit human service organizations (Ralph et al, 2008). In a research article titled 'Receipt of Government Revenue among Nonprofit Human Service Organizations', the author explores the ecological and institutional environments in which nonprofit human services function along with the economic and political actions they take in influencing the amount of government funding (Garrow, 2011).