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NGDOs as a moment in history: Beyond aid to social entrepreneurship or civic innovation?
499
Citations
4
References
2000
Year
Economic DevelopmentEntrepreneurshipSocial ChangeSocial SciencesPhilanthropySocio-economic DevelopmentAfrican DevelopmentPublic PolicyDevelopment AidEquitable DevelopmentGoals NgdosBeyond AidSociologyCivic InnovationBusinessSocial BusinessSocial InnovationDevelopment PolicyPolitical Science
NGDOs emerged during a rapidly changing era, yet their enduring goals to address poverty, inequity, insecurity, and injustice remain unmet by conventional aid frameworks. The paper seeks to determine whether social entrepreneurship and civic innovation can serve as a new framework for NGDOs and development beyond aid. The study attributes NGDO challenges to increasing tax‑based funding that shifts their civic orientation toward the public domain. The findings indicate that civic innovation better satisfies the twin requirements of civic financial embedding and principles of cooperation and non‑exploitation than social entrepreneurship.
NGDOs are the product of an era that is rapidly passing. Yet the common goals they strive towards remain relevant and are far from being realised. Poverty, inequity, insecurity and injustice were stubborn features of the old world order and are abiding features of the new. A brief history of NGDOs and of the radical shifts in the context where international development takes place shows that the goals NGDOs typically aspire to cannot be reached by simply relying on the framework employed by the official aid system. One important reason is that a growing reliance on tax-based funding is shifting NGDO morality, legitimacy and function from the civic to the public domain. Consequently, a new paradigm is required not just for NGDO development practice, but for the very nature of NGDOs themselves. This paper explores the extent to which social entrepreneurship and civic innovation could provide a new framework for NGDOs and development beyond aid. While both merit further attention, civic innovation is shown the better to fulfil the twin requirements of civic financial embedding allied to principles of co-operation and non-exploitation.
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