The launch of a new Working Group on Non-governmental
Organisations recognises the growing significance of NGO’s in governance and in
shaping and meeting the needs of citizens. Our interests are broad – to
understand the role of NGO’s in governance in the CEE region, to analyse he performance
and consequences of this sector, and to explore multi-sector strategies for
meeting the public interest. Our definition of NGO’s is a broad one, to
include informal organisations, cooperatives, non-profits, civil society organisations,
and so forth. Our interests lie particularly with those NGO’s whose mission is
in the public interest and pertains to governance, social services, public
policy, citizen participation, and/or humanitarian concerns. And we
intend to explore the role that NGO’s play – independently and in multi-sector
collaboration with government institutions – in defining and achieving the
public good.
There are many questions to explore about the work of
NGO’s in the central and eastern European region. How are these organisations
structured and administered? What roles do they play – for example, in service
delivery, public participation, policy analysis and social equity? Where
do they find resources? What does their non-profit status mean within the
context of state regulations? How do they link with other important
institutions – economic, religious, political and labour? What resources
and capabilities exist in this sector from country to country? How are they
administered and evaluated? Last but not least, what role are schools of public
administration and management playing in training leaders for the organisations
of this sector?
We welcome scholars and professionals with interest in
NGO’s and in multi-sector governance processes to join us, and we invite papers
with a theoretical, empirical and/or analytical focus on all aspects of these
questions. As a body of work develops within our working group, we hope,
as a community, to further refine and focus our agenda.
To help provide some structure to these initial
efforts, for 2016 we have identified four main questions to help focus the
first rounds of papers. These are:
- What is the role of NGO’s in governance at the
national and local level in CEE countries, and how is this shaped by public
attitudes, government policy, legislation, and financial support? How do actual
(latent) roles compare with the stated ones, and with those usually found
internationally?
- What are examples of existing multi-sector models of
governance in the region, in which NGOs and government are seeking to work
together?
- What are the techniques for the measurement and
assessment of NGOs and multi-sector initiatives, performance, in general and in
specific policy arenas?
- What is the current state of teaching and curriculum
development about NGO’s and multi-sector governance in schools of public
administration, policy and management in the region, and what contributions can
there be to improving curriculum and teaching?
We are also mindful of the important connections
between these topics and the conference theme: Spreading Standards,
Building Capacities: European Administrative Space in Progress. We
especially welcome work that addresses the place of NGO’s and multi-sector
governance in the European administrative space, including attention to
administrative capacities, legal oversight and standards for NGO performance,
improved NGO management, and the potential for an active NGO role in governance
to address issues of equity and human rights in the European Administrative
Space.