Paul.Treanor on Wed, 4 Jun 1997 20:54:57 +0200 (MET DST) |
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<nettime> Why NGOs are wrong (fwd) |
To: [email protected] Cc: [email protected] Subject: Why NGOs are wrong About the mail on NGOs which reached GEOPOL via nettime and the Hungary list... The basic defect of NGOs are these: 1] Most NGOs are national, and operate within one state and culture. Their membership is disproportionately from the university-educated middle class within each nation state (that often excludes ethnic minorities). NGOs are elite organisations. 2] There is a hierarchy of NGOs: almost all the political influence is concentrated in the small number in international NGOs - INGOs. (Greenpeace and Amnesty are the best known). Their membership comes from the elite within the first elite - usually English speaking. 3] NGO�s in western countries are in transition to business entreprises. (In the case of Greenpeace, for example, that transition is complete.) They operate increasingly as firms, seeking market share. The internal structure is that of a business entreprise: the fact that directors of INGOs look like directors of businesses is a sympton of that, but obviously not the cause. 4] NGOs therefore have collective interests. They must logically defend their operational enviroment, just as business entreprises must defend the free market. The concept of Civil Society is the result. De facto, Civil Society means NGOs, citizens groups and so on - it is a society of organisations, not individuals. Politically, NGOs promote Civil Society in the same way that business organisations promote the Free Market. (The Soros Foundation is good at combining both). 5] This defence of collective interests extends to the selection of personel. Just as business logically excludes opponents of the free market, NGOs discriminate against their opponents (although their is no organised opposition in the same way as opposition to the free market). In this way NGOs cut themselves off from criticism, and become a self-selecting elite, in the same way as the �business community� 6] NGOs are not subject to outside control. This is not a problem, so long as they do not impose their activity on others - but by definition they try to influence state and society. 7] In summary, NGOs are a section of the population, trying to impose a social model on the rest of the population - within states and at global level. Paul Treanor --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: [email protected] and "info nettime" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: [email protected]