1. NGO Coalition Building: East Asia and the Rise of Civil Society?
- Author
-
Gilson, Julie
- Subjects
- *
NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations , *CIVIL society , *SOCIAL change , *DECISION making - Abstract
This paper examines the rise of networks of transnational non-governmental organisations (NGOs) within Asia and by Asia-based NGOs and counterparts in the West. The very terms âcivil societyâ and âNGOâ have different connotations within various Asian countries, which provide very different legal and political environments for non-state actors. Despite these barriers, some transnational cooperation has developed in response to specific issues and in response to an international growth of social movements. Four main types of cooperation can be identified: cooperation of individual local NGOs with international organisations; bilateral or multilateral cooperation between specific NGOs within a sub-region of Asia; region-wide organisations to address particular issues; and advocacy within the framework of broader civil society groupings. This paper maps these emerging forms of transnational NGO cooperation; examines the impact which such cooperation has had in strengthening the capacity of NGOs; considers the prospects for the further development of NGO cooperation; and assess the implications of these developments for debates about the potential of transnational civil society as a vehicle for social change and the idea of civil society in Asia. It examines two case studies. The first case involves the Asia-Europe Peopleâs Forum, a parallel summit which has been created on the margins of the Asia-Europe Meeting, and which brings together disparate non-state groups to address collectively a wide range of state-sponsored agenda. The second case examines the development of inter-NGO networks around mine action in Southeast Asia, focusing in particular on the impact of external actors on local NGO activities. ..PAT.-Unpublished Manuscript [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008