NGOs, States and Donors

NGOs, States and Donors

EnglishPaperback / softback
Palgrave Macmillan
EAN: 9780333665824
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Detailed information

In the last decade the use of non-governmental agencies (NGOs) to promote development and reduce poverty and hunger has become a major feature of development policy. Donors have poured funds into NGOs, governments have allocated them major responsibilities and their number and size has grown. Has this popularity helped them to solve the problems of poverty or has it changed them so that they are now part of the 'development industry' that they used to criticize? This book provides the most detailed study available of the ways in which NGO-State-Donor relationships have changed the role that NGOs play in development. Its papers are introduced by two international experts on the topic and the contributors are leading academics and senior practitioners. The picture that emerges from the general reviews and detailed case studies of African, Asian and Latin American NGOs, is a complex one. However, the authors conclude that there is much evidence that NGOs are 'losing their roots' - getting closer to donors and governments and more distant to the poor and disempowered who they seek to assist.
EAN 9780333665824
ISBN 0333665821
Binding Paperback / softback
Publisher Palgrave Macmillan
Publication date December 20, 1996
Pages 309
Language English
Dimensions 216 x 140
Country United Kingdom
Readership Professional & Scholarly
Illustrations XVII, 309 p.
Editors Edwards, Michael; Hulme, David
Edition 1997
Series International Political Economy Series