History, asked by satinder46, 10 months ago

discuss the role that the ngo is playing in the removal of this evil​

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Answered by Anonymous
0

Answer:Non-governmental organizations (NGOs) are increasing the influence they are able to play on global politics. As far as they represent political values, interests, and demands that cut across the borders of the states. Furthermore, they participate in many trans-national and world-level actions and programs, and are recognized also by policy-makers as actors of the world political system, the reserved domain of the states. For this reason, it is quite safe to say that they have an impact on the transformation of the structure and processes of world politics. At the same time, it is safe not concealing that the NGOs effective actorness continues to depend on the access given to them by state governments and international organizations (IOs) to international institutions and common decision-making processes and actions. This chapter analyses the participation of NGOs in humanitarian intervention and peace operations. Knowledge about this area of action is of great importance to understand both the international role(s) of the NGOs and the transformation of the nature, composition, and actions of multilateral peace missions. In section one, NGOs are examined as actors whose international role has been institutionalized by the United Nations (UN), namely by means of the well-known consultative status procedure. In section two, the NGOs increasing participation in the management of civil conflicts is highlighted as the factor enhancing their role in the affirmation of the principle of humanitarian intervention. NGOs specific roles in multilateral security are also defined and explored in this section. NGOs are recognized as actors exercising the knowledge-provider, peace- facilitator, and voice-articulator role. In section three, NGOs effective actorness and roles are empirically tested by analysing their participation in the UNPREDEP mission in the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM). The NGOs recognition by the United Nations Galtung (1987), one of the earliest and leading analysts of contemporary social movements, describes the "power" of NGOs in negative and positive terms. In the former, NGOs power is not economic, not military and non-violent. In the latter, NGOs power is primarily cultural (ability to engage public opinion), political (autonomy in program management; contacts with national and international centres of power); moral (adherence to values, and the principles of international law);

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Answered by rishikeshgohil1569
2

Answer:Non-governmental organizations (NGOs) are increasing the influence they are able to play on global politics. As far as they represent political values, interests, and demands that cut across the borders of the states. Furthermore, they participate in many trans-national and world-level actions and programs, and are recognized also by policy-makers as actors of the world political system, the reserved domain of the states. For this reason, it is quite safe to say that they have an impact on the transformation of the structure and processes of world politics. At the same time, it is safe not concealing that the NGOs effective actorness continues to depend on the access given to them by state governments and international organizations (IOs) to international institutions and common decision-making processes and actions. This chapter analyses the participation of NGOs in humanitarian intervention and peace operations. Knowledge about this area of action is of great importance to understand both the international role(s) of the NGOs and the transformation of the nature, composition, and actions of multilateral peace missions. In section one, NGOs are examined as actors whose international role has been institutionalized by the United Nations (UN), namely by means of the well-known consultative status procedure. In section two, the NGOs increasing participation in the management of civil conflicts is highlighted as the factor enhancing their role in the affirmation of the principle of humanitarian intervention. NGOs specific roles in multilateral security are also defined and explored in this section. NGOs are recognized as actors exercising the knowledge-provider, peace- facilitator, and voice-articulator role. In section three, NGOs effective actorness and roles are empirically tested by analysing their participation in the UNPREDEP mission in the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM). The NGOs recognition by the United Nations Galtung (1987), one of the earliest and leading analysts of contemporary social movements, describes the "power" of NGOs in negative and positive terms. In the former, NGOs power is not economic, not military and non-violent. In the latter, NGOs power is primarily cultural (ability to engage public opinion), political (autonomy in program management; contacts with national and international centres of power); moral (adherence to values, and the principles of international law);

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