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PIA 2501 ORGANIZATIONS, INSTITUTIONS AND DEVELOPMENT: THE ROLE OF NGOs.

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Presentation on theme: "PIA 2501 ORGANIZATIONS, INSTITUTIONS AND DEVELOPMENT: THE ROLE OF NGOs."— Presentation transcript:

1 PIA 2501 ORGANIZATIONS, INSTITUTIONS AND DEVELOPMENT: THE ROLE OF NGOs

2 Grassroots Organizations Civic Education Land Rural Industries Rural Credit Governance / Democracy Communication and Support NGOs Women’s Focused Groups Target Group Decentralization and Civil Society

3 State Societal Linkages Central State - Macro Civil Society - Micro WeakStrong State-WeakStrong Mono-State…... INTERGOVERNMENTAL Systems in place. …..Local State SOFT STATE…………………………….PREDATORY STATE Local - SOFT STATE….………………LOCAL GOVERNMENT WeakStrong Mezzo-Intermediate

4 Civil Society--Review Networks of organizations, groups and individuals pursuing socio-economic interests "Beyond the family but short of the state" (Hegal)

5 Civil Society Review " Human Rights, Basic Needs and the Stuff of Citizenship" (Anonymous) Issue: First vs. Second and Third generation Human Rights and Civil Society

6 Civil Society NGOs, CBOs, PVOs: Who do they represent? Grassroots, interests, not for profits (neutrality) Groups Role of ethnicity, religion and class, vs. individual rights

7 Civil Society Privatization as an issue Corporatism vs. Clientelism Organic VS. Individualist nature of society (Vincent Ostrom) Establishing the rule of law Roman vs. Common Law What is the role of the individual

8 PIA 2501 Break

9 NGOs THE NATURE OF THE BEAST

10 NGOs--The Nature of the Beast Non-Profits vs. For Profits Not for Profits- More value directed Private Voluntary Organizations(PVOs) Community Based Organizations (CBOs) Foundations

11 NGOs- The Nature of the Beast Civic Associations Interest Groups Quangos Trade Unions Religious Organizations

12 Five Caveats Usually excludes “for profits” Issue of contractors- both for profits and non-profits Includes both International and Local Internationals are not universally loved

13 Caveats Very often internationals are religious or charity based Focus has been primarily on relief rather than development or civil society goals

14 Types of “Development” NGOs Philanthropy Relief and Welfare Societies Public Service Contractors Populist based development agencies (national)

15 Types of “Development” NGOs Grassroots associations (local or village based) Advocacy groups Public Service Contractors

16 Origins- Natural Disaster: Humanitarian Assistance and Human-Made Disaster War, Drought, Agricultural Failure Focus on Rural Development Human Rights Focus on Governance

17 Natural Disaster: Humanitarian Assistance and Human-Made Disaster NGOs--Areas of Perceived Advantage Cost-effective Small but efficient Innovative Staff loyalty and commitment

18 Natural Disaster: Humanitarian Assistance and Human-Made Disaster NGOs--Perceived Advantage Ideologically compatible with Development values Links with poor Image of populism

19 Natural Disaster: Humanitarian Assistance and Human-Made Disaster International NGOs—Weaknesses Lack of local legitimacy Donor driven Inefficiency

20 Natural Disaster: Humanitarian Assistance and Human-Made Disaster International NGOs—Weaknesses Amateurism Leadership and continuity problems Staffing problems Self-serving-own objectives Faith Based

21 Natural Disaster: Humanitarian Assistance and Human-Made Disaster International NGOs—Weaknesses Fixation on projects Problems of replication Lack of perceived accountability Learning problems/lack of institutional memory

22 Natural Disaster: Humanitarian Assistance and Human-Made Disaster International NGOs—Weaknesses Tensions with government institutions Politically threatening Ties with existing local elites Inability of humanitarian organizations to transfer to new development orientation

23 Group Discussion-- Civil Society and Democracy in... Latin America--South Eastern Europe Asia Africa

24 “Mini Discussion” Development, Social Beliefs & Civil Society Kushwant Singh, “Last Train” Norman Rush, “Bruns” The Nature of the Outsider Mahasweta Devi, “Dhowli” The Untouchables of the World Naipaul Believers, Unbelievers Secular vs. Religious Views of the World

25 “Winner” of the Day V.S. Naipaul Nobel Prize for Literature, 2001 Discussion Naipaul’s view of civil society Compare with: Graham Greene Samuel Huntington Susan George

26 Author of the Week: Arturo Escobar What Does Escobar say about the concepts Development Economics and Planning? How does he "Deconstruct" development? What does that mean? "What Is To Be Done?" according to Escobar. Can we de-objectify the targets of development? Subjects Customers Consumers Neighbors?


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