Kaldor - Civil Society and Accountability

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United Nations Development Programme

Human Development Report Office

OCCASIONAL PAPER
Background paper for HDR 2002

Poverty Eradication and Democracy in the Developing World


HUMAN DEVELOPMENT REPORT 2002
Civil Society and Accountability

Mary Kaldor

I. The Changing Global Context


Significant changes in the global setting over the course of the last few decades resulted in an

increasing prominence for the pursuit of transnational justice and individual accountability. The aftermath

of the terrifying attacks on America on September

2002/6
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HUMAN DEVELOPMENT REPORT 2002

Civil Society and Accountability

Mary Kaldor
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Civil Society and Accountability

Paper for HDR 2002

Introduction

It is a paradox of the contemporary period that, at a time, when more and more states all
over the world have adopted democratic forms and procedures, there is decreasing trust in
elected officials and politicians. This lack of trust is reflected in growing political apathy,
declining membership in political parties, and low voter turn out in elections. At the same
time, however, there appears to be more trust in civil society groups, which are often,
wrongly in my view, equated with Non-Governmental Organisations (NGOs). These
groups, which are supposedly independent of the state and of big companies, are not
elected; they are voluntary groups composed of committed individuals. They have
become much more publicly prominent in the last decade and are often seen as the
expression of public morality.

This paper is about whether this trust is justified in relation to the world’s poorest people.
I shall use the term moral accountability to refer to the responsibility of civil society
groups and individuals, concerned with relief and development, towards the people they
are trying to help. This sort of accountability is sometimes described as political
responsibility (Jordan and Tuijl) or as external accountability (Anheier). By procedural
accountability, I mean the formal mechanisms adopted by civil society groups for
management purposes. This kind of accountability involves responsibility towards
stakeholders - donors, boards or trustees, members or supporters, staff, as well as clients.
Thus moral accountability is roughly equated with political and external accountability,
while procedural accountability can be equated with management or internal
accountability.

It is often said that civil society groups have a ‘voice not a vote’ (Edwards 2000). They
are not representative and do not claim to be representative. Their internal forms of
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management are irrelevant to their role in the public arena since what matters is what
they have to say not whether they are internally democratic or representative. The
problem arises, however, when there are conflicts between internal and external
accountability, political and management imperatives. There are cases, in the
humanitarian field, for example, or in the case of biotechnology, where NGOs have used
their ‘voice’ to convey misleading information, which has the effect of mobilising
political and indeed financial support. There are other cases where groups claim to
represent the very poor in order to raise funds from outside donors. In this paper, I shall
investigate the relation between moral and procedural accountability for different types of
civil society groups and what this means in terms of improving the ways in which the
needs and concerns of poor people are expressed.

In the first part of the paper, I shall provide a brief historical overview of the concept of
civil society and the relevance of different meanings to the notion of ‘voice’ as it relates
to poor people. In the second part, I shall outline a typology of civil society actors that
might be helpful in clarifying different forms of accountability. And in the last section, I
will draw some conclusions and policy recommendations about the accountability of
different types of civil society groups.

What is Civil Society?

The contemporary term ‘civil society’ has its origins in the early modern period, the
seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The term, of course, had appeared earlier. Like all
Western political concepts, it can be traced back to Greek political philosophy. Aristotle
talked about politike koinona (political community/society) to refer to a rule-governed
society in which the ruler puts the public good before his (not usually her) private
interest. The term was translated into Latin as Societas Civilis.

The renaissance of the concept in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries was
inextricably linked to theories of individual rights and the idea of a social contract. What
was new about the early modern usage of the term was the assumption of human equality,
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drawn from Christianity. A civil society was a society where individuals come to together
to make a social contract and the outcome of that contract is expressed in the rule of law
and the existence of a state, which is also subject to the law. Juridical equality applied
both to rulers and the ruled. ‘When a King has dethroned himself and put himself in a
state of war with his people,’ wrote John Locke ‘what shall hinder them from prosecuting
him who is King, as they would any other man, who has put himself in a state of war with
them?’ (quoted in Goldwin, 1987, p 507)

At that time, there was no distinction between civil society and the state. A civil society
was more or less the same thing as a political society. Civil society was contrasted not
with the state but with other kinds of society –despotic empires, for example, or the state
of nature. In particular, a civil society was a peaceful society, a society in which people
treated strangers with civility, in contrast to other violent and ‘rude’ societies.

The Scottish enlightenment thinkers were to augment the concept with their emphasis on
the importance of commercial society. They saw the market as the condition for
individualism and the existence of a civil society. But they still understood civil society
in much the same terms as a rule-governed society based on the consent of individuals in
contrast to the state of nature, where there were no rules, or with despotic systems where
rules were imposed through coercion. (See Ferguson)

It was Hegel who was first to use the term as something distinct from the state. Hegel,
who was strongly influenced by the Scottish political economists, defined civil society as
‘the realm of difference, intermediate between the family and the state.’(Hegel 1996
p.185-6). In other words, civil society was equated with the economy. Hegel used the
term ‘bourgeois society’ (Bürgerliche Gesellschaft) and this was the definition to be
taken up by Marx and later nineteenth century thinkers. For Hegel famously, civil society
was ‘the achievement of the modern world…. the territory of mediation where there is
free play for every idiosyncrasy, every talent, every accident of birth and fortune, and
where waves of passion gush forth, regulated only by reason, glinting through
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them.’(Hegel, pp) Thus the state was viewed as a mediator, resolving the conflicts of civil
society; the civil servants were the ‘universal class’ acting in the public interest.

Although de Tocqueville used the term civil society in an eighteenth century sense to
refer to a rule-governed society, his contribution needs to be mentioned because of the
importance he attributed to associationalism and self-organisation, which informs so
much of contemporary thinking, especially in the United States. In his study of
democracy in America, he was greatly impressed by the extent of associations in civil life
and put forward the argument those active associations were a condition for freedom and
equality. As the state takes over more and more functions of daily life, as the division of
labour becomes more complex and as demands for the redistribution of wealth increase,
an active voluntary sector is necessary to provide a check on state power. ’As soon as
several inhabitants of the United States have taken up an opinion or a feeling they wish to
promote in the world, they look for mutual assistance; and as soon as they have found
one another out, they combine. From that moment they are no longer isolated men, but a
power seen from afar, whose actions serve for example and whose language is listened
to…Among the laws that rule human societies, there is one which seems to be more
precise and clear than all the others. If men are to remain civilised or to become so, the
art of associating together must grow and improve in the same ratio as the equality of
conditions is increased.’(Tocqueville, p.114)

For Marx and Engels, political associations were a reflection of material conditions.
They were to take up the Hegelian concept of Bürgerliche Gesellschaft and to emphasise
the role of the economy. According to Marx, the ‘material conditions of life are summed
up by Hegel after the fashion of the English and the French of the eighteenth century
under the name “civil society”; the anatomy of civil society is to be sought in political
economy.’(Quoted in Bobbio, p78) Unlike Hegel, however, Marx and Engels argued that
the state was subordinate to civil society; they saw the state as an instrument or apparatus
in the hands of the dominant classes. Civil society was the ‘theatre of history…Civil
Society embraces all the material relations of individuals within a definite stage of the
development of productive forces. It embraces the whole commercial and industrial life
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of a given stage and, hence, transcends the State and the nation, though, on the other hand
again, it must assert itself in its foreign relations as nationality and inwardly must
organise itself as state.’(quoted in Bobbio, p.82)

In the twentieth century, the content of the concept has been further narrowed to forms of
social interaction that are distinct from both the state and the market. Writing in prison,
the Italian Marxist, Gramsci called into question the economism of the Marxist definition
of civil society. According to Gramsci, it is not ‘economic structure’ as such that governs
political action but the ‘interpretation of it.’ Thus the ‘theatre of history’ is not the story
of economic development but of ideological and cultural struggles. Gramsci drew an
important distinction between coercion and consent, domination and hegemony.
Bourgeois society had established a powerful set of norms and institutions to sustain the
hegemony of bourgeois rule based on the consent of the working classes. Whereas
capitalism was overthrown in Russia through the capture of the state, this was not
possible in the west where ‘there was a proper relation between state and civil society,
and when the state trembled, a sturdy structure of civil society was at once revealed.’
(Quoted in Ehrenberg, p.209) Hence, he was to emphasis the need for political activism
in the realms of education, media and other institutions of civil society.

In contemporary usage, it is possible broadly to distinguish three different versions of


usages of the term:

The first version is what I call the ‘activist’ version. This is the version that initiated the
contemporary revival of the term in both Latin America and Eastern Europe. The term
emerged simultaneously in the 1970s and 1980s, and as far as I know without any
communication, in these two regions as a way of describing the efforts to create
autonomous public spaces in the context of authoritarian states –military dictatorships in
Latin America and totalitarian Communist regimes in Eastern Europe. In Latin America,
the intellectuals who used the term were strongly influenced both by Gramsci (via the
Spanish and Italian Communist parties) and by the ideas of liberation theology -–the
notion of the conscientisation of the poor, overcoming the ‘culture of silence’ (Howell
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and Pearce, Lewis). In Eastern Europe, the term arose out of the failure of the Prague
spring and the loss of faith that any change could come ‘from above’ or through
overthrow of the regime. The idea was that instead of trying to change the state, it was
important to change the relation between state and society, to create self-organised
institutions, independent of the state that could challenge the reach of the state (Michnik).
Terms like ‘antipolitics’ (Havel and Konrad) or ‘living in truth’ (Havel) expressed the
same idea. In both Latin America and Eastern Europe, these new autonomous spaces
depended on transnational links, and this was even before the advent of Internet. It was
both the existence of formal international instruments like the Conventions on Human
Rights or the Helsinki Agreement and the links with peace and human rights groups in
Western countries that helped to open up spaces in these countries (Keck and Sikkink,
Kaldor 1991).

This understanding of civil society was to be taken up by intellectuals in Europe and the
United States, as well as other parts of the world especially India, to mean the ‘new
politics’ (Arato and Cohen, Kothari). It referred to the idea of a realm outside political
parties where individuals and groups aimed to democratise the state, to redistribute
power, rather than to capture power in a traditional sense. It was associated with the so-
called new social movements that emerged after 1968, concerned with peace the
environment, women, human rights and so on. It involved an effort to create a public
space where individuals can act and communicate freely, independent of both the state
and capitalism. According to the German philosopher, Jürgen Habermas:
‘The expression “civil society” has in the meantime taken on a meaning different from
that of the “bourgeois society” of the liberal tradition, which Hegel conceptualised as the
“system of needs”, that is, as a market system involving social labour and commodity
exchange. What is meant by “civil society” today, in contrast to its usage in the Marxist
tradition, no longer includes the economy as constituted by private law and steered
through markets in labour, capital and commodities. Rather, its institutional core
comprises those non-governmental and non-economic connections and voluntary
associations that anchor the communication structures of the public sphere in the society
component of the life-world. Civil society is composed of those more or less
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spontaneously emergent associations, organisations, and movements that, attuned to how


societal problems resonate in private life spheres, distil and transmit such reactions to the
public sphere. The core of civil society comprises a network of associations that
institutionalises problem-solving discourses of general interest inside the framework of
organised public spheres. These "discursive designs" have an egalitarian, open form of
organisation that mirrors essential features of the kind of communication around which
they crystallise and to which they lend continuity and permanence.’(Quoted in
Ehrenberg, p.222-3).

The second version of the term ‘civil society’ can be described as the ‘neo-liberal’
version. This version is much associated with ideas about the ‘third sector’ or the ‘non-
profit sector’ that developed in the United States in the 1970s and 1980s. (Etzioni, Levitt,
Anheier and Salamon). The idea is that, in the United States, there is a group of
organisations that are neither controlled by the state nor the market, but which play an
essential role in facilitating the operation of both. This concept owes much to the
Tocquevillian emphasis on associationalism and is linked to neo-liberal ideas about
minimising the role of the state. NGOs, NPOs (non-profit organisations), charities and
voluntary associations are more flexible and innovative than the state. They can substitute
for the state, in providing social services for example; they can check abuses of the state
and poor governmental practises; and they can call corporations to account. The ideas of
Robert Putnam about social capital and Francis Fukuyama about trust are in line with this
version of civil society – the notion that trust and social interaction are essential
ingredients of good governance and properly functioning markets.

It is argued by civil society theorists like Ernest Gellner that it is this version that was
taken up by Western donors in the early 1990s. Civil society was needed as a cushion
against the shocks associated with structural adjustment, to provide a social safety net, for
example, at a time when public services were being cut, and to foster good governance.
Market failures and economic crises like those in Asia, were attributed to failures of
governance, especially corruption. Civil society, it was hoped, could correct this.
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A third version of civil society is the ‘post-modern’ version. The revival of the term civil
society has been criticised by anthropologists from a relativist position. Both activist and
neo-liberal versions, it is contended, are a western discourse. Comaroff and Comaroff
talk about the way civil society has become a ‘neo-modern’ myth, with its own
legitimising narrative. They talk about the ‘archaeology’ of civil society ‘usually told,
layer upon layer, as a chronological epic of ideas and authors’ starting with an ‘origin
story’ in the late 1700s. Outside Western Europe and North America, it is contended,
civil society, in the sense of individual rights and voluntary associations never extended
much beyond a few capital cities (Mamdani, Koonings and Krujit, Hann and Dunn). Yet
there exist various traditional and neo-traditional organisations, based on kinship or
religion that remain autonomous from the state and offer alternative sites of power or
autonomous spaces. In Iran, for example, ‘various religious and bazaar institutions and
groupings, under powerful molla patrons, and the duality of state power between the
presidency and the spiritual leadership, constitute some plurality of power as compared
with neighbouring states.’ (Zubaida, p.244)

It is usually argued that these groups cannot be included in the concept of civil society
because they may be compulsory associations and they are often mechanisms for social
control, especially the oppression of women. But the post-modernists suggest that there
cannot be an arbitrary division between ‘good’ westernised civil society and ‘bad’
traditional uncivil society.

Thus the post-modern version of civil society would argue for a more culturally sensitive
concept, which involves various national and religious groupings and a contestation of
narratives. The Turkish Islamicist Ali Bulac, for example, promotes the idea of a civil
society characterised by self-governing communities based on religion, with a minimalist
state. This idea, which has parallels with the Ottoman millet system, involves tolerance of
different religions and indeed secularism but at the same time, but it lacks the
individualism of Western models of civil society since the individual is bound by his or
her community. As Zubaida points out, this notion represents an ‘odd mixture of
communitarian corporatism and libertarianism’. (Zubaida, p.238).
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Underlying these different meanings, both historically and in the contemporary period,
there is, I would contend, a common core of meaning. Civil society always meant a rule
governed society based on the consent of individuals. In the early versions, the term
referred to the whole of society including the state. Different meanings of civil society, I
would argue, reflect the different ways in which consent was negotiated and reproduced.
Civil society could be described as those organisations, groups and movements who are
engaged in this process of negotiation and debate about the character of the rules – it is
the process of expressing ‘voice’. In the nineteenth century, it was the ‘voice’ of the
bourgeoisie that was shaping the liberal state; hence the identification of civil society as
bourgeois society. With the rise of labour movements, the terrain shifted to struggles of
worker organisations in relation both to the state and to capital; at that time, political
parties could also be viewed as part of civil society. By joining a trades union or a
political party, the ‘voices’ of individual workers could be heard.

To-day, civil society is transnational engaged in a process of debate and negotiation with
governments, companies and international organisations. Moreover, the groups involved
have extended beyond urban elites to include women, indigenous groups and other
excluded people. The differing contemporary meanings, I would argue, reflect different
political perspectives about the goals of the process of negotiation. For the neo-liberals,
the goal is to export the Western, or even more specifically the American model of
governance. For the activist, the goal is emancipation, a radical extension of democracy
in the West as well as the South, a goal that is linked to notions of global justice. The
post-modernists are sceptical about the goal-oriented nature of modernity; they would see
the contestation that is currently taking place on a global scale as a way of breaking with
grand narratives, teleological political projects that were associated with nation states.
The rise of the Internet allows for a riot of virtuality and for a denial of the existence of
something called the real.

In my view, civil society has to include all the groupings that are included in the different
versions – the relatively passive ‘third sector’ of the neo-liberal version, the social
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movements of the activist version, as well as the neo-traditional groupings of the post-
modern version. It is true that the neo-traditional formation may not provide a voice for
individuals because of their communitarian nature and, indeed may engage in various
forms of coercion and violence. But actually existing civil society has to contend with
these troublesome and contradictory issues; if it is to be an inclusive concept, it has to
include the exclusive. For the purposes of this report, the goal is closest to the activist
version –the emancipation of the poorest people. But the degree to which civil society
expresses this goal, that is to say, constitutes a voice for the poorest people, can only be
investigated by including all these various groupings. What James Putzel calls the ‘dark
side of social capital’ has to be incorporated as well.

The Actors of Civil Society

There is, to day, a proliferation of language used to describe the non-state actors in global
politics: social movements; NGOs and NPOs; advocacy networks; civil society
organisations; public policy or epistemic networks; to name but a few. In what follows, I
shall distinguish four ideal types, in a Weberian sense. They are not actually distinct
types since they overlap with each other. But they are useful for thinking about different
forms of accountability. Table 1 illustrates these four types.
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Table 1

Social Movements NGOs Social Nationalist and


Organisations Religious Groups
Mission Emancipation of Development and Protection and Empowerment of
the poor and Humanitarian Promotion of national and
excluded Relief Members Interests religious groups
Activities Protests, Service Provision Service provision, Mobilisation
demonstrations, and Advocacy Lobbying through media,
mediatique events religious
organisations, and
sometimes violence
Social Composition Activists, Professional Staff Workers, farmers, Newly urbanised
Committed employers, local groups, peasants.
individuals, communities,
students displaced persons
Forms of Loose horizontal Ranges from Ranges from Vertical and
Organisation coalitions, network bureaucratic and vertical and hierarchical though
corporate to small- hierarchical to can involve
scale and informal informal networks. networks of tightly
organised cells,
charismatic
leadership
Source of Funds Individual Foundations, Membership Diaspora, criminal
donations, governments, links
fundraising events corporations, as
like concerts well as individual
members and
supporters

The first type of civil society actor is social movements. Like civil society, there is a
range of definitions of social movements but it is generally agreed that social movements
are organisations, groups of people, individuals, who act together to bring about
transformation in society. They are contrasted with, for example, more tightly organised
NGOs or political parties. The social movement theorist, Sydney Tarrow says that social
movements are an ‘invention of the modern age and an accompaniment to the rise of the
modern state.’ At the base of all social movements are what he calls ‘contentious politics’
– action, which is ‘used by people who lack regular access to institutions, who act in the
name of new or unaccepted claims and who behave in ways that fundamentally challenge
others or authorities.’(Tarrow, p.3)

Social movements rise and fall. Their success depends both on their capacity to mobilise
and on the responsiveness of authorities. To the extent that authorities facilitate protest,
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then social movements are ‘tamed’, integrated into the political process and
institutionalised. ‘Taming’ is not just about access; it is about adaptation on both sides.
The authorities accept part of the agenda of protest; the movements modify their demands
and become respectable. To the extent that authorities repress protest and reject demands,
social movements are marginalised and may turn to violence. Tarrow talks about cycles
of contention; although the endings may differ, social movements do always come to an
end:
‘Each time they appear, the world seems to be turning upside down. But just as regularly,
the erosion of mobilisation, the polarisation between sectors of the movements, the splits
between institutionalisation and violence, and elites selective use of incentives and
repression combine to bring the cycle to an end. At its height, the movement is electric
and seems irresistible, but it is eroded and integrated through the political
process.’(Tarrow, p.175)

In the twentieth century, it is possible to talk about three waves of social movements. The
first wave was labour and self-determination or anti-colonial movements. The second
wave was what theorists of social movements call ‘new’ social movements. These are the
movements that emerged after 1968 and were contrasted with the first wave of ‘old’
movements. The third wave is the most recent and is often described as the ‘anti-
globalisation’ movement, even though only a minority of activists actually want to
reverse globalisation.

The ‘new’ movements after 1968 were concerned with new issues –human rights, gender,
third world solidarity, the environment or peace. In Europe and North America, they were
less concerned with social justice than ‘old’ movements although this was not true of
movements in the South where concerns about the environment or the position of women
were directly related to development issues. They expressed the political frustrations of a
new educated middle class or brain workers – ICT specialists or the caring professions
(doctors, lecturers, social workers) generated by post-industrialism and the welfare state
(Touraine). In contrast to the hierarchical mass membership organisations, which were
characteristic of ‘old’ movements, they pioneered new forms of horizontal organisation
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and new forms of protest, making use of the media, especially television. Whereas the
‘old’ movements aimed at persuading states to act and in the process helped to strengthen
them, the ‘new’ movements are much more concerned about individual autonomy, about
resisting the state’s intrusion into everyday life (Melucci 1988 and 1996). Claus Offe has
argued that the ‘new’ movements represent a demand for radical democracy. ‘Among the
principal innovations of the new movements of the new movements, in contrast with the
workers’ movement, are a critical ideology in relation to modernism and progress;
decentralised and participatory organisational structures; defence of interpersonal
solidarity against the great bureaucracies; and the reclamation of autonomous spaces
rather than material advantages.’(Quoted in Della Porta and Diani, p.12)

It is sometimes also argued that the ‘old’ movements are ‘national’ in contrast to the
cosmopolitan character of the ‘new’ social movements. But the ‘old’ movements were
not originally national. The labour movement was always an international movement.
The first international of labour was held in 1864; workers travelled to different countries
to express solidarity with their fellow workers from the late nineteenth century onwards;
the International Federation of Trades Unions was founded in 1901. Self-determination or
anti-colonial movements always appealed to universalistic conceptions of rights. The
identification of ‘old’ movements as national is the consequence of the cycle of
contention. ‘Old’ movements did primarily address the state, although not exclusively,
but it was through the state that ‘old’ movements were ‘tamed’. These movements were
transformed into political parties and, in the case of trades unions, into negotiating
partners for states and employers at a national level. The mass character of the ‘old’
movements, their vertical and hierarchical forms of organisation, are all perhaps
explainable in terms of the organisational norms of industrial, bureaucratic and military
society.

It can be argued that the growth of NGOs in the 1990s in part reflected the ‘taming’ of
the new social movements. In contrast to ‘old’ social movements, they were ‘tamed’ not
within a national framework but within the framework of global governance, as I shall
argue below. The third wave of social movements that emerged at the very end of the
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century can be viewed as a reaction to the ‘taming’ of the second wave. It involves a
revival of the preoccupations with social justice characteristic of the first wave but makes
use of many of the methods of the second wave. It brings together elements of the ‘new’
social movements and their ‘tamed’ successors, NGOs, concerned with women’s issues,
development or the environment. It involves students and brainworkers, like the second
wave movements. But it also embraces landless peasant movements, as in Brazil, and
indigenous people’s movements like the Zapatistas, or the tribal people in India, as well
as what might be called the ‘new’ labour movement. The ‘new’ labour movement
includes: international trade union federations, who have been forced to reform after the
Cold War when their activities were hamstrung by ideological divisions; new social
movement unions in Brazil, South Africa or Korea; new forms of labour organisations
like homeworkers in India or African township traders; as well as labour oriented grass
roots groups and NGO’s in various parts of the world. There is beginning to be a sea
change in labour movement attitudes; the functions of unions are being reconceptualised
away from an economistic preoccupation with wages towards new notions of labour
rights; and methods of organising are becoming more like ‘new’ social movements.

The second ideal type are NGOs. NGOs are often known as the ‘non-profit sector’ in the
United States or Japan or as charities and voluntary associations in Britain. Anheier says
that NGOs are organisations that are organised, private, non-profit distributing, self-
governing and voluntary. The growth of NGOs has been described by Lester Salamon as
the ‘global associational revolution’. The Johns Hopkins Survey of the non-profit sector
in 22 countries showed that this sector had contributed significantly to employment
growth in the 1980s and 1990s. The sector accounts for some 5.1% of total employment
in the countries surveyed and some 10.4million volunteers, bringing the total to 7.1% of
total employment. (Anheier) NGOs vary from large-scale NGOs organised both on
corporate lines and on bureaucratic lines, to small-scale local NGOs. Some of the biggest
NGOs are in the development and relief field, where there are some eight market leaders,
each with a budget of roughly $500 million a year; they include famous names like
Oxfam, Médecins Sans Frontières, Save the Children or CARE (Hulme and Edwards).
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The term NGO has an international connotation. The term was first used in Article 71 of
the UN Charter, where the Economic and Social Committee is empowered ‘to make
suitable arrangements for consultation with non-governmental organisations which are
concerned with matters in its competence.’(Gordenker and Weiss, p.22) Already,
international NGOs (INGOs) were established in the nineteenth century. The most
famous examples are probably the Anti-Slavery Society (1839) and the International Red
Cross (1864). By 1874, there were 32 registered INGOs and this had increased 1083 by
1914 although not all survived (Chatfield). INGOs were instrumental in setting up
international institutions, during this period, many of which began as non-governmental
institutions (Charnowitz). They also influenced treaty making, particularly in the case of
anti-slavery and many of the techniques that INGOs use today were pioneered during this
period, particularly parallel fora at inter-governmental conferences.

In the inter-war period, INGOs were very active in the League of Nations up to 1935 and
in the International Labour Organisation, which even today includes delegates from
trades unions, employer organisations and women’s groups in its formal structures,
alongside governmental organisations. According to Charnowitz, the two most influential
groups were the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF),
founded in World War I, which moved its headquarters to Geneva, and the International
Chamber of Commerce.

The number of INGOs increased during the post-war period not only under the
stimulation of new social movements but also as former missionaries and colonial
administrators sought new occupations. In the 1950’s and 1960’s, however, their
influence was constrained by the Cold War and the statist character of many of the post-
war international institutions. It was not until the 1970’s that the opening up of access for
‘new’ social movements to local and international institutions led to the proliferation of
both NGOs in general and INGOs in particular. Initially, this opening up applied mainly
to ‘soft’ issues that did not seem to engage directly with the ideological conflict, mainly
the environment and women. The Rio Conference on Environment and Development in
1972 marked the beginning of the parallel summit as a way of organising global civil
17

society organisations on particular issues. Likewise, a series of world conferences on


women helped to galvanise women’s groups – Mexico City 1975, Copenhagen 1980,
Nairobi 1985 and Beijing 1995 (Chen 1997). By the 1980’s, development and
humanitarian NGOs also began to be seen as partners for governments and international
institutions for a variety of reasons; their local knowledge, the need to bypass ineffective
or authoritarian governments, and the need to find ways to implement structural
adjustment packages.

The end of the Cold War accelerated these tendencies. It was no longer possible to ally
with authoritarian governments in the context of a wave of support for democratisation
and human rights. As the ideological conflict dissolved, governments and international
institutions became more responsive to peace and human rights groups. In the second half
of the 1990’s, ‘third way’ politicians came to power in Western Europe, who accepted the
neo-liberal orthodoxy, but nevertheless had learned their politics through the experience
of new social movements and were ready to pursue new issues and to open up the
corridors of power to ‘tamed’ social movements. Finally, in the late 1990s, even the
international financial institutions, like the World Bank, the WTO or the IMF, but
especially the World Bank began a dialogue with INGOs (O’Brien et al).

These openings have encouraged institutionalisation and professionalisation, the


transformation of social movements into NGOs or INGOs. During the 1990s, registered
INGOS increased by one third, from 10,292 to 13,206 and their memberships increased
from 155,000 to 263,000 over the same period (Global Civil Society 2001). Funding by
official agencies and private foundations have led to the development of a market for
NGOs, in which donors influence the culture and management style of NGOs and
successful NGOs transform themselves into a kind of oligopoly. OECD figures show
that, by the end of the 1990s, some 5% of all official aid is channelled through NGOs,
with differing shares for different countries. Some 85% of Swedish aid is channelled
through NGOs and some 10% of UK aid.
18

NGOs are both service providers and advocacy groups. Services include relief in
emergencies, primary health care, non-formal education, housing and legal services, and
provision of micro-credit as well as training to other service providers. Korten suggests
that NGOs follow a typical cycle, moving from concern with immediate relief, to projects
concerned with local development, to advocacy relating to the wider institutional and
policy context. But others have argued that the cycle may work the other way round as
‘new’ social movements acting primarily as advocates transform themselves into service
providers to gain credibility among local populations or as a way of ensuring their
survival (See Lewis).

NGOs, as a consequence both of their ‘tamed’ character and of their experience as


service providers are able to act as interlocutors on issues with which new social
movements are concerned. In addition, many have built up expert knowledge on
particular policy areas, which enables them to challenge the official experts. This is why
think tanks and international Commissions should be included in this category. Like
many of the NGOs, think tanks are a source of alternative expert knowledge.
International Commissions are another ‘taming’ device in which independent groups of
prominent individuals and experts are brought together to produce reports on issues of
global significance. The Brandt and Brundlandt Commissions pioneered this approach on
development and the environment respectively. In the 1990s, this type of commission has
proliferated – for example, the World Commission on Dams (WCD).

It is sometimes argued that NGOs and think tanks are predominantly Western. It is
certainly true that the culture and organisation of NGOs has been influenced by Western
models and that much funding is Western. But it is also the case that NGOs are a
worldwide phenomenon and some of the largest NGOs, like the Bangladesh Rural
Advancement Committee (BRAC) are to be found in the South. In the 1990s, a new
phenomenon has been the emergence of global networks, which involve NGOs, social
movements, as well as grass roots groups coming together to campaign around particular
issues, like land mines or HIV/AIDS.
19

The third type of civil society actor are what I call social organisations. Properly
speaking, they should be included in the category NGOs. They conform to the description
given by Anheier. But I have counted them as a separate category because their aims,
internal organisation and funding differs from what we typically consider to be NGOs.
By social organisations, I mean organisations representing particular sectors of society
defined in social terms rather than in cultural or religious terms. Thus this category
typically includes professional organisations – societies of lawyers, doctors, employers,
trades unions or farmers- community groups of women or youth, for example, as well as
groups of disabled people, displaced persons and refugees, homeless people, land less
labourers or groups of tribespersons. These organisations rarely receive outside funding
and are largely dependent on the resources of members. Many of these groups represent
poor people and, thus, their goals are similar to those of the development and relief
NGOs. But the goals are concrete, expressed in terms of the interests of members, rather
than abstract. Social organisations are not new even in the South; they can be traced back
to the guilds and trade associations of the middle ages, which existed in urban areas in the
Middle East and Asia as well as Europe even if their voluntary nature was less assured.

This type of organisation is an expression of the structure of society and it changes as


society changes. The period of the 1990s has been a period of rapid structural changes
both because of globalisation and IMF policies, and because of rapid technological
change especially the introduction of ICT. Many of the traditional social organisations
have been eroded and their political links broken; this is especially true of trades unions
and farmers organisations. On the other hand, new organisations have been developing to
defend the rights of the victims of rapid structural change, although these, of course, are
as yet weak. Such groups include movements of people in areas threatened by dam
construction, like the Narmada valley, new organisations of informal workers as
described above, organisations of refugees and displaced persons like the Srebrenica
women.

The fourth and final category is national or religious groups. These are organisations
based on particular sections of society, defined in terms of culture, kin or religion.
20

Although numbers are not available, these groups and movements have increased
dramatically during the 1990s and in many countries they have reached positions of
power. They are sometimes described as neo-traditional groups although they have
generally been reconstructed in the context of globalisation and with the use of Internet
and other new technologies. In some respects, these movements are similar to ‘old’
social movements, in that they are often mass movements, which include workers and
peasants as well as the middle classes; and they are organised in traditional hierarchical
ways, often with charismatic leaders. But they differ from ‘old’ nationalist movements,
movements for self-determination, in certain important ways. First, they tend to be either
movements based on exclusive identity politics, that is to say, they are claims to political
power on the basis of a label, generally ethnic, which excludes and is indeed hostile
towards others with a different label. Or they are movements based on exclusive
missionary politics, that is to say, claims to political power on the basis of religious
practise, which also excludes others with different or non-religious practises. Self-
determination movements were about democracy, participation and rights not about
ethnicity or religion, about inclusion within the framework of a nation-state. The ‘new’
nationalist movements tend to be authoritarian and backward looking, a reaction against
modernity, as opposed to ‘old’ nationalist movements that saw themselves as agents of
progress, building the modern state. Indeed, the new nationalism and religious
fundamentalism are ways of mobilising against democracy and openness.

There are, of course, exceptions; nationalist movements in places like Scotland or


Transylvania aim to decentralise democracy, they are organised in a much more
participatory way and are much more inclusive, although they have their fundamentalist
wings. Or there are groups, like in Turkey and indeed Bosnia, who do not necessarily
claim political power but want to organise society along communal lines

These groups differ from ‘old’ nationalist movements in other respects as well. In some
cases, like Al-Qaeda, they are organised as horizontal networks rather than vertical mass
movements, with tightly organised cells. Moreover, they have adapted some of the
methods of the ‘new’ social movements. In particular, they make use of the media,
21

particularly television, radio, and videos. Videocassettes are a particularly important form
of dissemination; cassettes of Bin Laden’s speeches circulate throughout the Middle East.
And they organise transnationally; powerful Diaspora groups often lobby on their behalf
in centres of power, both national and international.

Religious and national groups tend to be populist and they succeed in reaching out to
poor people in a way, that neither the ‘new’ social movements nor the NGOs have been
able to do. Nationalist movements were always middle class movements, especially in the
nineteenth century. As yet insufficient research has been undertaken on the new
movements, but it seems clear that membership tends to be composed of newly urbanised
middle classes, fearful of losing the gains that have come with economic growth in recent
years. A particularly important group of adherents are young men, students or
unemployed frustrated by the lack of opportunities and the exclusions of a globalised
world. Nevertheless, it does seem also that, in many places, these groups and movements
have succeeded in relaying a populist message and reaching out particularly to the
countryside. Television, videos and radio have been particularly important in this respect
in mobilizing a rural population unused to reading. These groups provide a sense of
ontological security in a society that is rapidly changing although it is a form of security
based on belief and fear rather than material conditions.

As for human development goals, these neo-traditional groups are mixed. Many
nationalist or communalist movements are neo-liberal. This is true of the BJP in India,
Jorg Haidar in Austria or the Northern League in Italy. Many, particularly Islamic groups
provide social services and humanitarian relief and indeed dependence on these
organisations is also a method of recruitment. Many are linked to criminal activities of
various kinds and their socio-economic strategies are indefinable.

Moral and Procedural Accountability of Civil Society Actors

Broadly speaking, moral accountability arises from the mission of the civil society actor.
Who is responsible for ensuring that the activities are designed to fulfil the mission? Most
22

civil society actors have some sort of procedural accountability, which depends on the
social composition of the group, forms of funding and the type of organisation. To what
extent do mechanisms of procedural accountability help to ensure moral accountability?
All of the civil society actors described above are engaged in a debate about how to help
the poor and deprived; in that sense they constitute or they claim to constitute a voice for
the poor and deprived. But the balance of these two types of accountability varies for
each of the different types and this has implications for the balance of different voices.

The ‘anti-globalisation’ movement is the main contemporary social movement. It is


composed of a range of groups, social organisations, NGOs, and committed individuals.
It involves many different voices, ranging from far-reaching radicals, who propose the
abolition of global institutions or, more positively, the free movement of labour, to
reformists campaigning about third world debt or in favour of a Tobin tax. The shared
mission is global solidarity, justice for the world’s poor, though there are many
differences about this is to be achieved. Although individual bits of the movement may
have their own procedural accountability mechanisms, the main procedural mechanism is
rough and ready, as with all social movements – the capacity to mobilise. The movement
depends on its capacity to mobilise, that is, on the extent, it is seen to be fulfilling its
mission. Since the movement depends largely on the voluntary energies of those engaged
in the movement, these can easily be withdrawn.

It is often argued that the ‘anti-globalisation’ movement is largely composed of middle


class Northern groups, whose ideas do not necessarily accord with those in the South.
After Seattle, for example, it was said that the protestors were opposing free trade, which
benefits the third world. It is certainly true that many of the protesters were insisting that
labour and environmental standards should be incorporated into trade agreements.
American trades unions were objecting to the import of products made by child labour or
in sweatshops. Some protesters were dressed as turtles to symbolize the plight of sea
turtles, an endangered species, killed to meet the developed countries’ rapacious demand
for shrimp; poor countries like India and Malaysia do not have the technology to protect
sea turtles while fishing for shrimp. However, as both third world governments and
23

NGOs pointed out, this linkage between trade and labour and environmental standards
does tend to penalize the poor countries, who cannot afford to meet the social and
environmental standards of rich countries. (What if Bangladesh were to refuse products
from developed countries on account of their responsibility for global warming, one third
world commentator asked?) A member of the Indian delegation to Seattle suggested that
the protesters were hand in glove with President Bill Clinton who was keen to torpedo the
next round of trade, which would have benefited developing countries and hurt traditional
Democrat supporters. Clinton, it was argued, was playing to a popular coalition of US
labour unions and environmentalists who are crucial to the Gore campaign. (See
Agarwal)

But it is also the case that only a few of the protesters were actually against globalisation.
Although it is true that the majority of the protesters in Seattle came from developed
countries, there was a significant third world NGO presence. Moreover, many more were
reached by Internet; a petition issued on the first day of the talks to protest the way the
talks were conducted mobilized support from 1,700 NGOs mostly in the third world
within 24 hours. (See Khor, 1999)

It is, in fact, the case that most of the participants in parallel summits are from
industrialised countries (Global Civil Society 2001). It is also the case that the
participation of groups through Internet only reaches a small minority since the poorest
people, by and large, do not have access to Internet. One reason for the dominance of
industrialised countries is that the majority of summits are held in Europe. Another
reason is that the participants are the people who can afford to travel and who are able to
obtain visas. After Genoa, an Indian writer from Tamil Naidu, wrote: ‘The fact is, if the
G8 had been meeting in New Delhi or Africa, it’s possible there would have been a
million black faces instead of 200,000 white ones. Speaking as an Indian, I am grateful to
the young white people who represented us.’(Mai Marcel Thekaera ‘The route from
Genoa’ Guardian July 25 2001)
24

Moreover, it is parallel summits that are visible because of the presence of political
leaders and of TV cameras. But demonstrations on issues of social justice –in Argentina
against structural adjustment packages, for example, in India or the Philippines about
dams – are just as large and even more frequent in the South. (See chronology in Global
Civil Society 2001)

The accountability of NGOs is more problematic. Of their nature, NGOs are self-selected
and self-appointed. As I have used the term in this paper, they are organisations,
dependent on outside funding, whose members are committed individuals, often from the
middle classes. They do not represent the poor and the deprived although their staff and
members care about the poor and the deprived. A lot has been written about the problems
of NGO management and internal accountability (Anheier, Lewis, Fowler). There are
wide difference among NGOs concerning their forms of organisation – formal versus
informal, hierarchy versus participation, networks versus federations, centralised versus
decentralisation, not to mention differences of organisational culture. Some NGOs are
membership organisations; others are governed by boards or trustees. Moreover, the
meaning of membership varies. In Amnesty International, for example, the members are
the ‘owners’ of the organisation and determine its decision-making. By contrast, the
members of Greenpeace are more like supporters passively donating money and numbers.

In my view, funding is critical in determining accountability. For NGOs, which may be


very large but do not depend like social movements on spontaneous mobilisation,
sustainability is critical. This may mean adapting to the requirements of official or
corporate donors, modifying political positions and/or becoming more bureaucratic and
professional. Or it may mean sustaining a public presence as a way of generating
individual donations; on the whole this is positive for an advocacy NGO but there may be
occasions when emergencies are exaggerated, as in the case of Greenpeace and Brent
Spar, or in the crisis in Eastern Zaire in order to mobilise public interest. A particular
problem that arises from the financial imperative is the competitive nature of NGOs, the
need to identify a market niche, and to distinguish the NGOs brand name from others.
25

This contradicts the co-operative practises, which ought to and often do take place as a
consequence of the normative character of the mission. As David Lewis puts it:
‘To survive, to-day’s NGO has been forced to become more corporation-like and less
church-like. Its primary concern, though rhetorically still to actualise social visions, is
also to cater to a marketplace (of ideas, funders, backers, and supporters).’ (Lewis, p.199)

These are some of the reasons for the growing criticism and suspicion of NGOs
especially in Southern countries. At one extreme, it is argued that NGOs are merely the
‘handmaidens of capitalist change’. They are seen as the ‘ modernisers and destroyers of
local economies’, introducing Western values and bringing about ‘economicide’. (For a
discussion of this perspective, see Lewis, p.32). It is also argued that by substituting for
state activity, NGOs bypass formal mechanisms of accountability and reduce the power
of citizens. Bangladesh, where NGOs have become such important actors, is sometimes
described as a ‘franchise state’ (Wood 1997). Others suggest that NGOs sometimes
displace local organisations, diverting funding, and introducing inappropriate poverty
alleviation strategies (Arllano-Lopez and Petras 1994).

While there is undoubtedly substance to some of these criticisms, it is also important to


recognise that they only apply to a subgroup of NGOs. There is a wide variety of NGOs
and a wide diversity of donors. The behaviour of the big institutional donors is not the
same as, say, Scandinavian governmental donors or private foundations. There are many
NGOs, especially in the South that have introduced innovative approaches to local
development, that have helped to empower grass roots groups, or that campaign as part of
the ‘anti-globalisation’ movement.

The third type of actor is social organisations. These are membership organisations and,
in so far, as they are concerned about issues of social justice, these coincide with the
concerns of their members. Thus, for this type of organisations, there is a clear
correspondence between procedural and moral accountability. Obviously, these
organisations are sectoral and their concern is with their members not all members of the
community. Hence their behaviour will depend on the type of group they represent, the
26

coalitions in which they engage, and the dialogue and discussions both externally and
internally that help to change strategy. The organisation representing the women of
Srebrenica is interesting in this respect. Initially, it was strongly influenced by the Islamic
nationalist party, who tried to use the women for propaganda purposes. But over time, the
organisation has come to recognise that the best interests of its members is served
through co-operation with other displaced groups, even if they come from different
nationalities (Freizer and Kaldor, 2001).

The fourth actor is national and religious groups. Of course, there are religious groups
like Christian Aid or the Aga Khan Foundation, whose behaviour is not different from
other NGOs. But my concern is with so-called neo-traditional groups, even though these
are not really traditional; they are often groups that have reconstructed tradition in the
context of globalisation. The mission of these groups is national or spiritual and
presumably, this reflects the concerns of its members. But forms of procedural
accountability are murky. Typically, these are vertically organised, under the leadership
of individuals, spiritual and/or charismatic leaders. These are communitarian movements,
where the community comes before the individual and where there is not much space for
individual influence in determining the overall interests of the community. Particularly,
in the case of religious groups, these interests depend on scriptural interpretations of
priests and mullahs. In addition, funding imperatives may allow for disproportionate
influence from particular groups, in the Diaspora, for example, or for the justification of
action that may not seem to accord with the mission –drug trading, for example, or loot
and pillage.

It can be argued that during the 1990s, NGOs and national and religious movements were
the strongest actors in civil society. The anti-globalisation movement only became
significant towards the end of the decade. Social organisations were weakened by
structural change. Both the growth of NGOs and the growth of national and religious
groups have to be understood as one component of the process of globalisation. NGOs
were actively encouraged by global institutions as a way of coping with the process of
structural change. The growth of national and religious movements can be understood as
27

a reaction to the insecurities that accompanied structural change as well as the failure and
decline of earlier emancipatory project that appealed to ordinary people like socialism or
post-colonial nationalism. However, as I have argued, these two types of civil society
actors are the least accountable to the poorest people.

What then can be done to increase the accountability of civil society actors to the poorest
people, to enhance the ‘voice’ of poor people in the global public sphere? Some
preliminary ideas are suggested by this survey of civil society.

First it is important for global institutions, international institutions and governments, not
to privilege NGOs in debates about social justice. NGOs are the respectable end of civil
society; they can engage in the institutional discourse and indeed can contribute
knowledge and ideas. Dialogue with social movements and social organisations is a way
to increase the voice of poor people, even though such a dialogue is more difficult and
contentious. NGOs find it much easier to use the discourse of the institutions and, for this
reason, are able to act as interlocutors for other civil society actors but they should not be
privileged. This difficult dialogue with the anti-globalisation movement was beginning
after Genoa but has been halted in the wake of September 11; it needs to be revived.

There have been plenty of proposals for a ‘structured voice’ for civil society groups. In
my view, what is important is not so much the particular forum for dialogue but rather the
culture of and political commitment to such a dialogue. There is a tendency not to take
seriously the difficult and radical groups. But it is they who have to be brought in to the
dialogue even if it involves confrontation rather than civilised conversation.

There is always a problem about who to involve in such a dialogue. But there could be
mechanisms developed through which the various civil society groups decide themselves
who should ‘represent’ them, rather than having the institutions pick and choose. This
does not preclude handpicked participants at seminars or workshops designed for
particular purposes. But it would mean that the core of the dialogue would be initiated
through a bottom-up rather top-down process.
28

Secondly, national and religious groups should not be excluded. They have to be
involved in a dialogue both with the institutions and with other civil society actors. There
is a dialogue among social movements, NGOs and social organisations but the national
and religious groups tend not to be part of this dialogue. How should the neo-traditional
groups be included? One problem is that their concerns are with religious and national
goals not with human development. Herein lies a dilemma. What if it turns out that the
poor want Islamic rule, say, rather than human development? That viewpoint has to have
space to be expressed. Those of us who have faith in reason, would argue that, given a
free communicative space, a conclusion would be reached favourable to human
development. However excluding that viewpoint could lead to its opposite –the spread of
oppressive national and religious regimes.

The other problem about including the neo-traditional groups is the absence of internal
democracy. If the neo-traditional groups are asked to choose who speaks on their behalf,
it will be the ‘reliable’ people in leadership positions not those who might be swayed by
discussion. This is why it is so important that a dialogue among civil society groups take
place, since these groups are more able to engage the grass roots than governmental
institutions.

Thirdly, mechanisms need to be developed to regulate the activities of NGOs. NGOs do


have important skills and experience to offer and it would be a pity if disenchantment
with the accountability process reduced their role in development and relief. There have
already been many proposals in this vein in the NGO management literature. Michael
Edwards, in particular, makes useful suggestions for self-regulation, while Anheier
emphasises the importance of developing grievance mechanisms.

One important way to increase the accountability of NGOs is through the funding
process. Would it not be possible to go beyond dialogue and involve poor people directly
in the funding process? Porto Alegre in Brazil offers an interesting example of ways in
which community groups can be brought into the budgetary process, not as a substitute
29

but as a supplement to formal processes. One way to reconcile the moral and procedural
accountability of NGOs is to involve the people they are trying to help directly in the
funding process. As stated above, diversity of funding is important; the individual donor
who finds an innovative project must not be discouraged. But big institutional funders
could try to develop ways in which part of the money they disburse is controlled by the
people they are supposed to help. How this would be done and how the people would be
chosen could be part of the dialogue.

Thirdly, social organisations representing poor people need to be strengthened. This is


not necessarily a matter of funding but rather of empowerment both through increased
dialogue and through helping to extend membership through enabling mechanisms, like,
for example, the spread of Internet access.

Finally, the issue of violence needs to be addressed. Violence is unfortunately a form of


voice. It is also a way of suppressing voice. In Seattle, Prague and Genoa, violence
catapulted the anti-globalisation protests into the public eye and acted as a kind of shock
tactic to donors and corporations. There are plenty of similar examples elsewhere. In
Kosovo and Macedonia, for example, the issue of Albanian rights was not taken seriously
until guerrilla groups appeared on the scene. Since September 11, much more attention
has been paid to Islamic grievances. On the other hand, violence discredits moderate
voices. Violence is polarising and squeezes those who seek more democratic ways of
expressing discontent. Violence has to be dealt with not just through criminal procedures
but also through strengthening non-violent forms of voice. How this can be done needs to
be part of in the dialogue.

One of the reasons that there is less trust in politicians and elected officials is that debates
at a national level no longer determine policy, that important decisions that affect every
day life are taken at both global and local levels. How is it possible to develop
mechanisms through which the poorest people feel they have a say in how these decisions
are taken? Civil society is not a substitute for formal democratic processes; rather it is a
way of strengthening the substantive character of democracy. It involves the construction
30

of a political culture at a global, as well as national and local levels, through which those
who are formally responsible for making decisions are more sensitive and responsive to
the needs and concerns of the poorest people.

Civil society has become the buzzword of the 1990s but it has tended to be equated with
NGOs. I have tried to argue that other types of civil society groups and other
understandings of civil society need to be taken seriously as well. In the wake of
September 11, this is no longer just a goal to be pursued by those who care about the
poor; it is an imperative if we are to live in a relatively non-violent world.

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