Friend or Patron? Social Relations Across the National NGO–Donor Divide in Ghana
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Springer
Abstract
The article examines the institutions governing relations between grant using
national NGOs and grant giving international donors in three regions of Ghana
(Upper West, Northern and Greater Accra Region). Formal procedural rules and
professional norms can be viewed as necessary to minimise opportunities for informal patronage, rent-seeking and corruption made possible by the unequal access to
resources. However, semi-structured interviews, life histories and observation high light the positive role informal networks, connections, personal contacts and friend ship play in enhancing collaboration between donors and national NGOs. Friend ships originating in kinship and ethnicity, school links and past collaboration offer
opportunities for infuencing and resource mobilisation, but can also weaken NGO
sustainability. Informal contacts and face-to-face interactions also build trust and
strengthen lines of accountability, with non-adherence to shared norms resulting
in sanctions and reputation loss. These findings affrm the positive role of informal
relations, and highlight how they can complement formal rules and professional
norms governing NGO–donor relations rather than undermining them. It throws a
very different light on the role of informal institutions than that fostered by a discourse of clientelism and provides a more nuanced conceptual foundation for assessing ‘formalisation’ as a normative strategy.
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Research Article