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      Behind the scenes: International NGOs’ influence on reproductive health policy in Malawi and South Sudan

      1 , 2 , 2 , 3 , 1
      Global Public Health
      Informa UK Limited

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          Abstract

          Global health donors increasingly embrace international non-governmental organisations (INGOs) as partners, often relying on them to conduct political advocacy in recipient countries, especially in controversial policy domains like reproductive health. Although INGOs are the primary recipients of donor funding, they are expected to work through national affiliates or counterparts to enable 'locally-led' change. Using prospective policy analysis and ethnographic evidence, this paper examines how donor-funded INGOs have influenced the restrictive policy environments for safe abortion and family planning in South Sudan and Malawi. While external actors themselves emphasise the technical nature of their involvement, the paper analyses them as instrumental political actors who strategically broker alliances and resources to shape policy, often working 'behind the scenes' to manage the challenging circumstances they operate under. Consequently, their agency and power are hidden through various practices of effacement or concealment. These practices may be necessary to rationalise the tensions inherent in delivering a global programme with the goal of inducing locally-led change in a highly controversial policy domain, but they also risk inciting suspicion and foreign-national tensions.

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          Most cited references33

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          Learning from Abroad: The Role of Policy Transfer in Contemporary Policy-Making

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            Transnational Networks and Policy Diffusion: The Case of Gender Mainstreaming

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              Knowledge, moral claims and the exercise of power in global health.

              A number of individuals and organizations have considerable influence over the selection of global health priorities and strategies. For some that influence derives from control over financial resources. For others it comes from expertise and claims to moral authority-what can be termed, respectively, epistemic and normative power. In contrast to financial power, we commonly take for granted that epistemic and normative forms of power are legitimate. I argue that we should not; rather we should investigate the origins of these forms of power, and consider under what circumstances they are justly derived.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Global Public Health
                Global Public Health
                Informa UK Limited
                1744-1692
                1744-1706
                December 13 2017
                April 03 2019
                March 14 2018
                April 03 2019
                : 14
                : 4
                : 555-569
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Centre for Development and the Environment, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway
                [2 ] Department of Epidemiology and Population Health, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK
                [3 ] Curtin University, Perth, Australia
                Article
                10.1080/17441692.2018.1446545
                29537338
                84f289b0-d446-40fe-85e8-db8c4d2e3366
                © 2019
                History

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