The rationale for the growth of nonprofit management educationin the United
States has recently been charted by O'Neill (2005). Ten years previously, the
United States and the United Kingdom were at similar levels of development. By
2006 the parallel lines had been broken. Why has nonprofit management education
expanded in the United States while provision of graduate education for the
voluntary sector in the United Kingdom has stood still? This article explores
the factors that have prevented parallel growth in education provision. It
argues that the university as an institution, both in terms of its nature and
its
power structures, is one of those factors. It presents the story of the closing
of the world's first voluntary sector course at the London School of Economics
and concludes with reflection on the likely future of voluntary sector
management education provision in the United Kingdom.