Social movements and NGO interaction

Author: remco

Social movements and NGO interaction

David Sogge and Gisela Duting


Tags:
Worldwide , Civil Society Building
Additional tags: Social movements civil society building NGO collaboration

Are we entering a post-NGO era in development? Aid critics very much  suggest so. Hailed as a magic bullet for development two decades ago,  NGOs are increasingly criticized for being ineffective agents of change,  out of touch with broader social currents in society and operating in a  fragmented way. Under pressure to show results, NGOs and their donors  are increasingly attempting to align with social movements in a bid to  scale up their impact. Social movements are an older, looser form of  organizing with a better track-record in structural societal change.  Yet, their fluid nature does not lend it self easily to outside support.  Therefore outside interventions have often worked to their detriment.

These observations and others form the backdrop of a study on social  movements and NGO interaction, that was carried out by David Sogge and  Gisela Dütting in 2008 and 2009. The study draws on field research  covering 55 NGOs in 8 countries across 3 continents, backed up with desk  research on NGO annual reports and academic literature, interviews with  academics and a number of consultative workshops.The upshot? The dynamics of collective civic action emerges as an important research theme, with many dimensions yet  unsufficiently explored. And the aid critics that captured the starting  line of this article should not judge too hastily. Collective civic  action cannot be engineered, but NGOs and their supporters can play a  significant, albeit limited positive role, as long as they proceed with caution and remain aware of the complexity and sensitivity of the civil  society eco-systems in which they intervene.

The study produced 4 publications which can be downloaded here

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