ABSTRACT

Ragged Trousered NGOs is a compelling first-hand account of the NGO sector and wider civil society over the past 40 years, examining how and why people take collective action and engage in social development projects. The book explores different organisational and methodological aspects of NGO work and social action, asking what was possible to achieve at a grass-roots level at different times, in different economic and political contexts in the East and West. Adopting a critical perspective, the author argues that social action continues to play a vital and varied role, and yet it struggles to challenge deep-rooted power relations and traditional forms of behaviour in today's unequal world.

In particular, the book draws on examples from the former Soviet Union in transition, and the UK's voluntary sector over the last 40 years, with a view to challenging Eurocentric views about organisations and communities. The analysis adopts a Gramscian view of hegemony and an internationalist and anti-war position on key issues arising in recent armed conflicts and the new cold war with Russia. The book concludes by addressing the challenges for development workers, noting the precarious nature of NGO work despite its many achievements, and suggesting ways in which social activists can pick up more strength and support.

This book's practical perspective on progressive forms of organisational management will be of considerable interest to civil society and NGO development workers, as well as to researchers and students in the fields of international development, politics, sociology and regional studies.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

A story of civil, social and political activism that starts in East London and travels to the USSR and post-Soviet Russia and Central Asia

chapter 1|24 pages

On time, place and youth activism

From Kyrgyzstan’s 2010 revolution to the anti-racist movement in East London in the 1970s

chapter |27 pages

Schools of self-management

Promoting an alternative urban strategy in the face of Thatcherism in the 1980s

chapter 3|28 pages

International volunteering and solidarity

And the fall of Soviet socialism

chapter 4|33 pages

NGO capacity builder

Organisational development in Central Asia in the transition period

chapter 5|24 pages

Improving Services or Promoting Rights

Ideological and practical dilemmas for NGOs faced with cuts to social welfare East and West

chapter 6|25 pages

Working in Conflict

A Gramscian and world systems analysis of NGO responses in the new hot and cold wars

chapter 7|23 pages

Theories of Change

New agendas of civil society, social and political activists at the international, national and local levels

chapter |7 pages

Conclusion

Towards 2020