1. Introduction, Zhanna Kravchenko, Lisa Kings and Katarzyna Jezierska.- Part I. Resources as Constraints.- 2. Pecunia olet: The funding dilemma for think tanks in Poland, Katarzyna Jezierska.- 3. Domestic funding for civil society in a non-democratic context: The example of the Presidential Grants in Russia, Yulia Skokova and Christian Fröhlich.- 4.Polish human rights organizations: Resisting institutional pressures, Zhanna Kravchenko, Katarzyna Jezierska, Marta Gumkowska, Beata Charycka, and Magdalena Szafranek.- 5. . Rural community development in Sweden: From challenging to mainstream?, Anette Forsberg.- Part II. External Constraints and Facilitators of Resources- 6. From local to digital and back: E-resourcefulness among urban movements in Poland, Anna Domaradzka.-7. Between autonomy and compliance: The organizational development of Russian civil society, Vsevolod Bederson and Andrei Semenov.- 8. Navigating contemporary developments in Swedish civil society: The case of Save the Children Sweden, Lisa Kings.- 9. Humane resources? The people behind Polish civil society organizations, Galia Chimiak.- Part III. Organizations and Resources: Intertwined Transformations.- 10. Doing the right things or doing things right? Exploring the relationship between professional autonomy and resources in volunteering, Cecilia Gullberg and Noomi Weinryb.- 11. Liberty, loyalty, and solidarity. The role of transnational, national, and local resources in voluntary organizations in Russia, Zhanna Kravchenko.- 12. Resources shifting values: Online and offline resources in Swedish civil society, Håkan Johansson and Gabriella Scaramuzzino.-Chapter.- 13. St. Petersburg LGBTQI+ activists negotiating financial and symbolic resources, Pauliina Lukinmaa.-Chapter 14. Epilogue, Apostolis Papakostas