Is social change fundable? NGOs and theories and practices of social change

Northern NGOs have come under critical scrutiny since the 1990s, often with negative conclusions as organisations which had supported radical social change in the 1970s and 1980s have since turned themselves into a professionalised and bureaucratic aid sector. The article focuses on the Northern NGO...

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Veröffentlicht in:Development in practice 2010-08, Vol.20 (6), p.621-635
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description Northern NGOs have come under critical scrutiny since the 1990s, often with negative conclusions as organisations which had supported radical social change in the 1970s and 1980s have since turned themselves into a professionalised and bureaucratic aid sector. The article focuses on the Northern NGOs that purport to fund progressive social change and which encourage beneficiaries to question market and political power, and on the NGOs to which they channel funds in Latin America. After examining various types of critique, the article asks whether it is not only dangerous in practice to fund social change but also misguided in principle, or whether there remain ways to use resources to enhance the capacity of local change agents to make the choices that they deem appropriate. It concludes that much depends on the theory and practice of social change that underpin the resource transfer, particularly in relation to the transformation of power (as opposed to 'empowerment'), to social activism, and to the robustness of efforts within NGOs to resist or modify bureaucratic imperatives from back-donors.
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); PAIS Index; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; JSTOR; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Activism
Aid
Beneficiaries
Bureaucracy
Change Agents
Choices
Civil society
Communities
Development policy
Donors
Economic liberalism
Empowerment
Feminism
Funding
Latin America
Latin America and the Caribbean
Markets
NGOs
Non-governmental organizations
Nongovernmental Organizations
Personal empowerment
Political debate
Political Power
Radicalism
Risk
Robustness
Scrutiny
Social Change
Social movements
Transformation
title Is social change fundable? NGOs and theories and practices of social change
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