Home ›
Reflections on NGOs in Tanzania: what we are, what we are not, and what we ought to be
NGOs and social activists run the risk of following the policy directions favoured by foreign donor agencies to the detriment of their own organisational and moral capacity to act in solidarity with those whose interests they claim to support. With specific reference to Tanzania, the author argues that while NGOs readily take action to protect their own interests, they do not consistently stand up for the basic freedoms of working people. In a unipolar era, which holds that the age of politics and international solidarity is over, it is vital for NGOs and other social activists to keep alive the belief that an alternative to the existing world is both necessary and possible.
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)