NGOs, Civil Society, and the State in Bangladesh: The Politics of Representing the Poor

Author(s)
White, S.C.
Publication language
English
Pages
19pp
Date published
01 Apr 1999
Publisher
Development and Change 30 (2)
Type
Articles
Keywords
NGOs, Poverty
Countries
Bangladesh

The established rhetoric of opposition between state and NGOs as development agents has shifted to one of complementarity and common interest. Along with this, the ‘comparative advantage’ claimed for NGOs has expanded from economic and welfare benefits to encompass also the political goods of civil society and popular participation. This paper reviews these developments in the context of Bangladesh. It argues that they need to be assessed critically in ways which are both theoretically informed and locally contextualized. While recognizing that there are, indeed, areas of common experience and interest between the state and NGOs in Bangladesh, it questions whether these necessarily coincide with the interests of those they all invoke: the poor.