Moving forward research agendas on international NGOS: Theory, Agency and Context

Paul Yaw Opoku-Mensah, David Lewis

    Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

    89 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    This paper sates out an argument for moving forwrd research on non-governmental organisations (NGOs)within development studies. The body of research on NGOs that emerged from the late 1980s onwards focused primarily on NGO roles as development actors and their organisational attributes, but pais less attention to theory and context. While such research had many positive strenghts, it was also criticised for its normative focus, and for its vulnerability to changing development fashions and donor preoccupations. Today, attitudes to NGOs have grown more complex and ambiguous, and the institutional landscape in which NGOs are embedded is undergoing rapid change. A new wave of NGO-related reserach is underway which gives particular emphasis to theory, agency, method and context. Such approaches have the potential to consolidate the field of NGO research within development studies as a more stable and theoretically-grounded subject area. Copyright 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
    Original languageEnglish
    JournalJournal of International Development
    Volume18
    Issue number5
    Pages (from-to)665-675
    Number of pages11
    ISSN0954-1748
    Publication statusPublished - 2006

    Keywords

    • non-governmental organisations
    • NGO research
    • civil society
    • development
    • development agencies
    • development policy
    • third sector

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