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Introduction Introduction
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An overview of the NGO sector: Size, origins, growth An overview of the NGO sector: Size, origins, growth
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NGO service provision: Sectors, locations, delivery mechanisms, and quality NGO service provision: Sectors, locations, delivery mechanisms, and quality
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Types of services Types of services
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Location and reach of services Location and reach of services
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Direct and indirect provision Direct and indirect provision
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Collaborative provision Collaborative provision
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Contributions to policy-making Contributions to policy-making
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Quality of contributions to service provision Quality of contributions to service provision
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NGO–government relations in the governance of service provision NGO–government relations in the governance of service provision
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Implications and conclusions: The political economy effects of NGOs providing services Implications and conclusions: The political economy effects of NGOs providing services
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References References
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36 NGOs and public service provision
Get accessJennifer N. Brass is an Associate Professor at Indiana University’s O’Neill School of Public and Environmental Affairs and author of Allies or Adversaries? NGOs and the State in Africa (Cambridge University Press, 2016).
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Published:02 April 2020
Cite
Abstract
Since the 1980s, international and Kenyan-based NGOs have come to play a pivotal position in the governance of service provision in Kenya. Not only do they provide services directly to citizens, but they also engage in indirect provision, collaborative provision, and policy-making related to service provision locally or nationally. As such, NGOs have come to form part of the de facto organizational composition of the Kenyan public administration. The political economy effects of this NGO participation have been mixed: service provision has expanded, particularly where there is collaboration in delivery, and there has been some movement toward greater line-ministry accountability and participatory development techniques. At the same time, however, NGOs may lend legitimacy to undeserving local or national political regimes, may reduce the possibility for democratic accountability for service provision, and may thrive at the expense of Kenya state capacity.
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