Nongovernmental Sector and Social Capital in Transition - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 10
About This Presentation
Title:

Nongovernmental Sector and Social Capital in Transition

Description:

How does social capital develop in relation to past experiences and according ... Resistance to collectivism (Rose & Haerpfer 1994), problems with institutional ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:26
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 11
Provided by: ceu28
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Nongovernmental Sector and Social Capital in Transition


1
Non-governmental Sector and Social Capital in
Transition
  • Rasma Rozenberga
  • Central European University

2
The questions explored in this study
  • How does social capital develop in relation to
    past experiences and according associations of
    people with formal and informal networks?
  • How well do NGOs serve as representatives of
    peoples interests and as a social capital
    indicator in the transition context?

3
Transition context
  • Rapidly developed NGO sector, largely by the
    support of international donors
  • New form of interest representation
  • Challenges for further sustainable development,
    gradually developing tradition of local
    philanthropy
  • Many successful developments / still problems
    with public trust and participation

4
Some illustrations from Latvia
  • Approximately 20 of population involved in NGOs
  • In serious problem situation and need for help,
    only 1-2 of people would turn to NGOs, whereas
    7-20 would approach different kinds of
    government institutions
  • Generally, NGOs are perceived as distant from
    people and a place where people meet friends,
    develop their skills and serve their own
    interests
  • (Data from the studies of Gaugere Austers 2005
    and Baltic Institute of Social Sciences 2005)

5
Explanation (I) Past experiences
  • Debate did socialism destroy social capital or
    just left consequences on its formalization?
  • Resistance to collectivism (Rose Haerpfer
    1994), problems with institutional performance
    (Aberg 2000) or associations with forced
    participation during the socialist regime?
  • Lack of confidence in ones own and community
    efforts (Gaugere 2005, Baltic Institute of Social
    Sciences 2005) learned helplessness?

6
Explanation (II) Representativeness
  • Financial dependence, according adjustment to the
    priorities of donors and disconnection from grass
    roots (Gaugere 2005, Fagan 2005, Mahoney 2004,
    Cox Vass 2000 etc.)
  • Number of NGOs growing, however, tendency for
    those who are active to become more active,
    whereas those with lower income and socially
    disadvantaged regions tend not to cooperate
    Gaugere (2005)

7
International donors
National governments
Supporting or selecting interests?
NGOs
General society
Or small part of active members?
8
Benefits of formalization
  • Those who participate in groups tend to have more
    general trust (Gaugere Austers 2005)
  • More measurable civil society
  • Practical advantages for the groups (state and
    private support, cooperation with other
    communities etc.
  • Question should it apply solely to NGOs?

9
Policy solutions?
  • Public awareness rising through dissemination of
    success stories rather than political discourse
  • Awareness of the problem of trust, rational
    balancing between support for NGOs and other
    types of organizations (including local
    governments), promotion of cooperation where
    possible
  • Broader interpretation of civil groups and more
    support for existing social capital

10
Your questions and comments are welcome now
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com