In recent decades there has been a great expansion in the
number, size and influence of International Non-Governmental
Organisations (INGOs) involved in international relief and
development. These changes have led to increased scrutiny of such
organisations, and this scrutiny, together with increasing
reflection by INGOs themselves and their staff on their own
practice, has helped to highlight a number of pressing ethical
questions such organisations face, such as: should INGOs attempt to
provide emergency assistance even when doing so risks helping to
fuel further conflict? How should INGOs manage any differences
between their values and those of the people they seek to benefit?
How open and honest should INGOs be about their own uncertainties
and failures?
This book consists of sustained reflections on such questions.
It derives from a workshop held at Melbourne University in July
2007 that brought together a group of people - for the most part,
reflective practitioners and moral and political philosophers - to
discuss such questions. It explores honestly some of the current
challenges and dilemmas that INGOs face, and also suggests some new
ideas for meeting these challenges. Our hope is that the kind of
explicit reflection on the ethical issues INGOs face exemplified in
this publication will help to promote a wider debate about these
issues, a debate that in turn will help INGO managers and others to
make better, wiser, more ethically informed decisions.
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