1st Edition

The Politics of Development Co-operation NGOs, Gender and Partnership in Kenya

By Lisa Aubrey Copyright 1997

    First Published in 2004. The Politics of Development Cooperation interrogates the politics of interorganizational development cooperation, examining issues of power, autonomy, and dependence. Focusing on Kenya and in particular on Maendeleo Ya Wanawake (MYWO), the largest national women’s organization, and its partners in its relational environment, this book probes the relationships between foreign donors, grassroots development organizations and governments. Aubrey examines whether it is possible for the North and the developing world to be engaged in genuine development partnerships, the influence resource contributions, financial and technical, have on agenda formulation and compromises, and whether organizations such as MYWO are truly NGOs, as they claim to be, or whether they remain an extension of the state exploited by patriarchal party politics. Gender is central to the analysis of this book, with issues reflecting and reintroducing the politics of unequal resources in development cooperative partnerships. Differences in status among women are also systematically examined because the politics of development affect elite and grassroots women differently.

    1 INTRODUCTION 2 BRIDGING LITERATURE GAPS: FRAMING THE PROBLEM OF THE POLITICS OF DEVELOPMENT COOPERATION 3 THE EVOLUTION OF MYWO FROM 1952 TO 1992 4 A CHANGING RESEARCH METHODOLOGY AMID POLITICAL VOLATILITY, ENVIRONMENTAL UNCERTAINTY AND A CULTURE OF FEAR AND SILENCE 5 RESEARCH FINDINGS: A BARRAGE OF CONTRADICTIONS 6 THE WEB OF DECEIT: GRASSROOTS DEVELOPMENT CAUGHT?

    Biography

    Lisa Aubrey is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science and the African Studies Program at Ohio University.