Non-Governmental Organisations and their networks are proliferating in all regions of the world. They address every transnational issue from population to peace, human rights to species rights, genocide to AIDS. Supporters claim NGOs are effective in achieving their goals, while detractors counter that NGO power is paltry compared to governments and corporations.
Challenging both views, De Mars irreverently reveals the political claims implicit in every transnational NGO. They are best conceptualised, he argues, not in terms of either principles or power, but through the partners they make in transnational society and politics. NGOs and transnational networks institutionalise conflict as much as cooperation, and reshape states and societies, often inadvertently. NGOs have overthrown dictators, provided life support for collapsed states, and reengineered the family. Their historical origins contrast sharply with current realities, and show signs of radical change in the future.
Содержание
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1. Your NGO Starter Kit
2. Partners in Conflict: A Structural Theory of NGOs
3. Ironic Origins of Transnational Organising
4. NGOs vs. Dictators: Argentina’s Dirty War Revisited
5. Dancing in the Dark: NGOs and States in Former Yugoslavia
6. Engineering Fertility
7. Changing Partners, Shaping Progress: The Future of NGOs
Appendix A: Active NGOs Discussed in This Book
Selected Bibliography
Index
Об авторе
William De Mars is Professor and Chair of the Department of Government at Wofford College, South Carolina. He has studied NGOs operating in Europe, Africa, the Middle East, Central America and East Asia and is the author of NGOs and Transnational Networks (Pluto, 2005).