Please enable JavaScript.
Coggle requires JavaScript to display documents.
NGOs and Non-State Actors - Coggle Diagram
NGOs and Non-State Actors
Nongovernmental organizations have become a key part in national global politics.
NGOs are established and have many different institutions around the world.
They focused a lot on women's welfare and empowerment.
in 2000 it was said that NGOs were disbursing between twelve and fifteen billion dollars per year.
The social movement of feminism is less widespread than the plethora of NGOs that are talking about gender issues and women welfare.
Sabine Lang used the phrase "the NGOization of feminism" to describe this.
Because of the changes that were going on feminist research came out that questioned the nature and function of the NGOs
Some of the recent writings provide more critical and contextual understanding between the NGOs and development.
Some believe them to be a form of neoliberal cooptation
Others think that the NGOs within transnational circuits of neoliberal power.
Debates about the impact of NGOs on states because of neoliberalism and globalization,
Some stated that they will contribute to a stronger society while others thought that they would reduce states sovereign power over citizens
some argues that they will strengthen states while others believed then might weaken them.
NGOs are present in every country and associated with every social issue and political debate.
many different NGOs work to maintain the distinction as a central feature of the institution despite having different influences from different states.
They vary in type and make up a large share of organizations and bodies that talk about the welfare and empowerment of women
NGOs might help produce the state through the state effect.
They make the state visible by stating that they are not a state even if forms of government proliferate with them.
This term was made up byTimothy Mitchell
The United Nations conference on women made visible the gaps between women's lives and the representation of women.
In one conference the NGO came as a feminist form of representing women's interest that could not be easily represented through official institutions.
The name "nongovernmental organization" gave the NGO a kind of official yet nonofficial status