Power And Its Discontents: The Long Road To Systemic Change In The Aid Sector
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World Development
Abstract
Power inequalities between Northern and Southern NGOs have historically plagued development cooperation. A
growing momentum towards localisation, locally-led development, and shift the power is indicative of wide
spread efforts to respond to these inequalities. Drawing upon new survey data, we explore the nature of specific
actions taken by a sample of NNGOs and SNGOs to address these power inequalities and analyse the extent to
which these equalize power. We find that organisations in our sample are taking important steps toward
reconfiguring traditional power dynamics and fostering more collaborative and accountable relationships be
tween Northern and Southern actors. Yet a deeper analysis of these raises questions around whether actions are
deep enough to rebalance or upturn unequal relationships and contribute to broader systems change. We find
that innovations within the aid system are making incremental improvements without fundamentally shifting
where decision-making power and financial power lie. Significant to scholars and practitioners alike, these
findings underscore the need for more substantive and systemic changes to achieve genuine equity in devel
opment cooperation
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Research Article
Citation
Banks, N., Bukenya, B., Elbers, W., Kamya, I., Kumi, E., Schulpen, L., ... & Yeboah, T. (2026). Power and its discontents: The long road to systemic change in the aid sector. World Development, 200, 107259.
