Home ›
NGOs and the State: a case-study from Uganda
An analysis is presented of research carried out in 1995, focusing on programmes funded by an NGO, Oxfam, as the basis of a case study of the Ugandan health sector. The involvement of NGOs in service provision for the state in Uganda is discussed together with the changing trends in aid distribution and what they mean for NGOs, the state and for their relationship with each other. Sections consider whose responsibility it is to provide a viable health service, and the importance of NGO support for the health service in Uganda. Abstract supplied by kind permission of CABI. This article is freely available as a chapter in Development NGOs and Civil Society.
Author:
Issue
Guided search
Click a term to initiate a search.
Content type
- Abstract (1433)
- Book review (603)
- Book (20)
Keywords
- Aid (493)
- Civil society (621)
- Conflict and reconstruction (174)
- Environment (164)
- Gender and diversity (394)
- Globalisation (165)
- Governance and public policy (418)
- Labour and livelihoods (318)
- Methods (460)
- Rights (295)
- Social sector (259)
- Technology (81)
Regions
- Arab States (28)
- Middle East (4)
- Oceania and Japan (31)
- Central and Eastern Europe and the CIS (32)
- East Asia (96)
- Latin America and the Caribbean (204)
- North America (35)
- South Asia (202)
- South East Asia (17)
- Sub-Saharan Africa (354)
- Western and Southern Europe (45)