NGO's as stakeholders in corporate social investment in South Africa

The research project examines the context in which modern-day CSI practises have unfolded in South Africa. It examines the space occupied by NGOs in the practise against the backdrop of post-apartheid policies and legal frameworks. The report presents the findings that due to the high level of devel...

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Main Author: Diedricks, Razia
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2014
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10539/15290
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-wits-oai-wiredspace.wits.ac.za-10539-152902019-05-11T03:40:47Z NGO's as stakeholders in corporate social investment in South Africa Diedricks, Razia The research project examines the context in which modern-day CSI practises have unfolded in South Africa. It examines the space occupied by NGOs in the practise against the backdrop of post-apartheid policies and legal frameworks. The report presents the findings that due to the high level of developmental challenges in South Africa accompanied by the country’s unique legacy of apartheid, the practice has unfolded along racial prescriptions, particularly in the form of Broad Based Black Economic Empowerment (BBBEE). Various requirements in the form of donor prescriptions and interventions as well as compliance with policy has led to the practise being formalised leading to structural changes in many NGOs which has been accompanied by both positive and negative implications. The findings challenge the notion that NGOs are dancing to the donors tune based on their resource dependence and posits that a more emphatic articulation of the currency and value which NGOs possess in the form of values, knowledge, creativity, experience and expertise could result in more strategic engagement with donors that could lead to sustainable partnerships versus the current state of philanthropy based CSR. 2014-08-27T07:15:23Z 2014-08-27T07:15:23Z 2014-08-27 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10539/15290 en application/pdf application/pdf
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language en
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description The research project examines the context in which modern-day CSI practises have unfolded in South Africa. It examines the space occupied by NGOs in the practise against the backdrop of post-apartheid policies and legal frameworks. The report presents the findings that due to the high level of developmental challenges in South Africa accompanied by the country’s unique legacy of apartheid, the practice has unfolded along racial prescriptions, particularly in the form of Broad Based Black Economic Empowerment (BBBEE). Various requirements in the form of donor prescriptions and interventions as well as compliance with policy has led to the practise being formalised leading to structural changes in many NGOs which has been accompanied by both positive and negative implications. The findings challenge the notion that NGOs are dancing to the donors tune based on their resource dependence and posits that a more emphatic articulation of the currency and value which NGOs possess in the form of values, knowledge, creativity, experience and expertise could result in more strategic engagement with donors that could lead to sustainable partnerships versus the current state of philanthropy based CSR.
author Diedricks, Razia
spellingShingle Diedricks, Razia
NGO's as stakeholders in corporate social investment in South Africa
author_facet Diedricks, Razia
author_sort Diedricks, Razia
title NGO's as stakeholders in corporate social investment in South Africa
title_short NGO's as stakeholders in corporate social investment in South Africa
title_full NGO's as stakeholders in corporate social investment in South Africa
title_fullStr NGO's as stakeholders in corporate social investment in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed NGO's as stakeholders in corporate social investment in South Africa
title_sort ngo's as stakeholders in corporate social investment in south africa
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10539/15290
work_keys_str_mv AT diedricksrazia ngosasstakeholdersincorporatesocialinvestmentinsouthafrica
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