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Book cover: Comparative Social Research

Comparative Social Research

ISSN: 0195-6310
Series editor(s): Dr Fredrik Engelstad

Subject Area: Sociology and Public Policy

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Toward a typology of civil society: Understanding non-government public action


Document Information:
Title:Toward a typology of civil society: Understanding non-government public action
Author(s):Chris Miller, Joanna Howard, Antoaneta Mateeva, Rumen Petrov, Luis Serra, Marilyn Taylor
Volume:26 Editor(s): Bernard Enjolras, Karl Henrik Sivesind ISBN: 978-1-84950-607-6 eISBN: 978-1-84950-608-3
Citation:Chris Miller, Joanna Howard, Antoaneta Mateeva, Rumen Petrov, Luis Serra, Marilyn Taylor (2009), Toward a typology of civil society: Understanding non-government public action, in Bernard Enjolras, Karl Henrik Sivesind (ed.) Civil Society in Comparative Perspective (Comparative Social Research, Volume 26), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, pp.71-103
DOI:10.1108/S0195-6310(2009)0000026008 (Permanent URL)
Publisher:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Article type:Chapter Item
Extract:

In the United Kingdom and elsewhere, the move from government to governance has been well documented (Stoker, 1998; Rhodes, 1996, 1997). In the global North, governance is understood as a response to complexity and a recognition that many problems cannot be solved by government alone, whereas in democracies across the North and South, there is a concern to address the democratic deficit and [re]legitimize the state. In both contexts, new governance spaces and opportunities have emerged for non-governmental actors to engage in the process. Interest in community or “third sector” participation has spread around the globe, albeit with very different expressions in different contexts, and in many cases at the insistence of international financial institutions. Deacon (2007, p. 15) describes such global trends as “the contested terrain of emerging global governance” in which he includes both international non-governmental organizations and transnational social movements. Although this shift represents new opportunities, the extent to which the spaces for participation offer a new vision of the public domain is contested (Fung & Wright, 2003; Cornwall & Coelho, 2007).


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