The Aid Chain: Coercion and Commitment in Development NGOs
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Wallace, Tina (Author)
- Bornstein, Lisa (Author)
- Chapman, Jennifer (Author)
Title
The Aid Chain: Coercion and Commitment in Development NGOs
Abstract
Significant proportions of aid already flow through the non-governmental sector, but questions are increasingly being asked about the role of NGOs and whether they can deliver on their ambitious claims. This study examines conditionality and mutual commitment between international aid donors and recipient NGOs, North and South. Fieldwork and case study material from Uganda and South Africa are used to support the authors’ contention that the fast changing aid sector has--in the context of a dynamic policy environment--encouraged the mainstreaming of a managerial approach that does not admit of any analysis of power relations or cultural diversity. This increasing--essentially technical-- definition of the roles of NGOs has worked to limit the extent of the very development that the organizations were initially established to promote.
Place
Rugby
Publisher
Practical Action
Date
September 18, 2007
# of Pages
256
Language
English
ISBN
978-1-85339-626-7
Short Title
The Aid Chain
Library Catalogue
Amazon
Citation
Wallace, T., Bornstein, L., & Chapman, J. (2007). The Aid Chain: Coercion and Commitment in Development NGOs. Practical Action.
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