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Civil Society by Design: Donors, NGOs, and the Intermestic Development Circle in Bangladesh
 
 
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Civil Society by Design: Donors, NGOs, and the Intermestic Development Circle in Bangladesh [Hardcover]

Kendall Stiles (Author), Kendall W. Stiles (Author)

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Book Description

June 30, 2002 0275975509 978-0275975500

Drawing on years of research and direct experience in Bangladesh, Stiles pulls together theoretical strands from economics, sociology, and anthropology to help explain an emerging social structure in the Third World. These structures, which he calls intermestic development circles, bring together international donor agencies with various domestic community and private organizations. In Bangladesh not-for-profit agencies are dramatically transforming their operation and organizational cultures, while in turn Western NGOs are themselves changing in subtle ways. Scholars of development will find Stiles's intriguing account of the reciprocating effects of extensive interaction, cooperation, and tensions between international donors and domestic recipients informative and provocative.

Moving through three discernable phases, each one explainable by resort to different theories, these development circles grow from mere trading arrangements to a coherent social structure, separate from the rest of civil society in Bangladesh. While in the process of the not-for-profits receiving assistance become wealthier and more effective, they lose much of their local identity and become part of a transnational network. At the same time, donors must recast themselves in order to work effectively with these agencies, which often creates tension between local and home offices. The book closes with some recommendations that might attenuate some of the more troubling effects of this transformation.


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About the Author

KENDALL W. STILES is Associate Professor of Political Science, Loyola University Chicago. He is the author of Case Histories in International Politics (2nd edition), Global Institutions and Local Enpowerment, and Negotiating Debt: The IMF Lending Process.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Beginning in the mid-1980s, official donors began to channel funds both directly and indirectly to local non-profit organizations in the developing world. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
intermestic development circle, donor consortia, donor consortium, civil society empowerment, development circles, official donors, donor staffs, microcredit programs, struggle for accountability, foreign funding, foreign donors, donor support, civil society actors, multilateral donors
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
World Bank, Grameen Bank, United States, Qazi Faruque, Affairs Bureau, Flood Action Plan, Mohammed Yunus, Awami League, Nijera Kori, Third World, Professor Yunus, Asian Development Bank, Cold War, Ford Foundation, Latin America, Democracy Partnership, Mahmood Hasan, Ain-O-Shalish Kendra, Daily Star December, Gonoshastya Kendra, Kummudini Welfare Trust, South Asia, United Kingdom, House of Commons, Middle East
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