Divergent Sources of Legitimacy: A Case Study of International NGOs in the Water Services Sector in Lilongwe and Maputo
Description
Since the 1980s international development activities have increasingly been transferred from government organisations to International Non Government Organisations (INGOs). In this article we argue that the trend for NGOs to increasingly undertake government-funded tasks leads to conflicts between the different sources on which the legitimacy of the NGO is based. In particular considerable friction may exist between output and normative legitimacy. Output legitimacy relates to the degree to which an organisation is able to achieve specified results. These results are supposed to coincide with specific performance indicators stipulated in project proposals. Normative legitimacy is based on values (as stated in the vision or mission of the organisation) on which the organisation is founded. We find that INGOs have an incentive to emphasise output legitimacy over normative legitimacy. Secondly, we argue that in response to this friction, NGOs are driven to actively 'create' legitimacy by organisation present...
Publication Details
Journal article
Journal:
Journal of Southern African Studies
Publisher:
Informa UK Limited
ISSN:
03057070
Volume:
38
Pages:
681-697
Persistent Identifiers
DOI
10.1080/03057070.2012.711106
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MAGID
2089206828
References
039-634-984-624-641
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