ACADEMY OF MARXISM CHINESE ACADEMY OF SOCIAL SCIENCES
中文
Home>English>Scholars’ Profiles
Reversal of Fortunes: Transformations in State-NGO Relations in Bangladesh
     Release time: 2018-09-24

 

 

Lamia Karim

 

Abstract

In 2011, the government of Bangladesh began an investigation into the financial dealings of the Grameen Bank that won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2006. This disciplining of a world-renowned institution and its founder by the state reconfigures the altered relationship between the state and NGOs in Bangladesh. This article investigates this about-face between the state and NGOs from the 1990s, when their relationship was characterized as ‘partners in development’, to the late 2000s when the state saw the leading NGOs and their leaders as potential political adversaries. In Bangladesh, the former relationship of a weak state vis-à-vis the powerful, western-funded NGO has been recalibrated. Under the present condition of authoritarian rule, the state is willing to accept the role of the NGO as a development actor but not as a political contender. This article examines this shifting relationship between the state and NGOs.

 

Keywords

Bangladesh, Grameen Bank, neoliberalism, NGOs, political economy, state

 

From: Critical Sociology 2018 44 (4-5)

Editor: Wang Yi

 

Related Articles