* An innovative look at changing roles of NGOs in global politics
* Based on extensive fieldwork and discussions with NGO presidents and CEOs
This is an invaluable resource to anyone studying general nonprofit management issues, as well as those studying the specific challenges of relief and development organizations. Boasting a unique insiders’ perspective, it is the first book-length study of the largest Northern-based international relief and development NGOs.
The authors address the challenges of accountability, evaluation, and organizational learning for NGOs and the growing significance of complex emergencies, peacebuilding, and advocacy work. They evaluate how infrastructures are being organized on a worldwide basis and responding to the transformative changes globalization demands.
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Coralie Bryant Professor and Director of the Economic and Political Development Program at the School of International and Public Affairs, Columbia University, is also assisting L'Institut des etudes politques, (Sciences-Po) in Paris with the development of their Atelier in Development. Both Coralie and Christina worked with Marc Lindenberg on a previous Kumarian book, Going Global: Transforming International Relief and Development NGOs. Prior to Columbia University, she was a senior staff member of the World Bank, where, among other work, in 1990-1991 she was one of the central authors and negotiators for the World Bank's first policy paper on governance.
Marc Lindenberg was dean of the University of Washington's Daniel J. Evans School of Public Affairs and an influential scholar and practitioner in humanitarian relief and international development.
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