ABSTRACT

Over six billion dollars in developmental assistance is funneled annually through non-governmental organizations (NGOs), yet little is understood about the nature of their relationship with communities and the real impact of their work. This book examines what role NGOs really play in fighting poverty in Latin America. Expert NGO professionals and scholars explore grass-roots relationships between international religious and secular NGOs and poor communities. They probe the power structures, cultural assumptions, dangers and possibilities that underlie NGOs' work. While fighting poverty is the mission of many NGOs, most are aware that they often fail to make things better, and, in fact, may make things worse. By providing a forum for Northern and Southern NGOs, donors, scholars, and poor people themselves, this book explores the causes and cures of poverty, and presses at the boundaries of our understanding of participatory development. It identifies both internal and external factors that influence the success of NGO projects, and moves beyond standard best-practice theory to probe more deeply the relationships that underlie poverty and how these relationships can be shifted to achieve solutions.

chapter |20 pages

Making a Statement or Finding a Role

British NGOs in Latin America

chapter |17 pages

Perceptions

NGOs in a Context of Socioeconomic Change, Argentina at the End of the 1990s

chapter |18 pages

Visions of Development

Catholic NGOs and Indigenous Communities in Northwestern Argentina

chapter |22 pages

Market Articulation and Poverty Eradication?

Critical Reflection on Tourist-Oriented Craft Production in Amazonian Ecuador

chapter |33 pages

The Transformation Side of Microenterprise

The Case of the Opportunity International Program in Honduras

chapter |7 pages

Awakening

Campesino Families, Development Institutions, and the Process of Socioeconomic Change

chapter |25 pages

Disencumbering Development

Alleviating Poverty Through Autonomy in Chiapas