1 / 6

Civil Society in Angola

Civil Society in Angola. The CEIC-CMI Angola Seminar 2008 5 June Inge Amundsen, CMI. Civil society in Angoola. Historical development Pre and post 1992 developments Recent developments Coordination and cooperation Emerging political and economic issues

noura
Download Presentation

Civil Society in Angola

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Civil Society in Angola The CEIC-CMI Angola Seminar 2008 5 June Inge Amundsen, CMI

  2. Civil society in Angoola • Historical development • Pre and post 1992 developments • Recent developments • Coordination and cooperation • Emerging political and economic issues • The uneasy NGO – government relationship • The urge for control • The revised Law on the Associations • The revised Law on the Media • Inroads, space and external support • Local government and service delivery • Bilateral donors, international organisations, international businesses

  3. The historical ups and downs • Pre 1991: low • Government approved and supportive • UN and emergencies • 1991-92: up • Development of independent (and radical) organisations • 1992-94: down • Resurgence of civil war, repression • 1994-98: up • Lusaka peace process • 1998-02: down • Resurgence of civil war, repression • 2002 ->: up

  4. Recent developments • Umbrellas, platforms, “redes” and NGO cooperation • Rede Terra • Rede Muher • Rede Eleitoral • Parceiras de Angola • FONGA • Civil Society Conference nov 07 • Emerging political and economic issues • Human Rights • Mãos Livres, AJPD, SOS Habitat • Transparency and democracy • Bishops’ Conference of Angola and São Tomé • Budget and public finance • Associação Fiscal, Jubileu 2000 • Elections and participation • Rede Eleitoral

  5. Inroads, space, and international support • Inroads and space • Local and regional level • Province authorities • Service provision level • Ministry of Health, Education • International support • Bilateral donors • EU, bilaterals, WB (FAS) • International organisations • NDI, FES, PWYP/EITI, UNDP • International businesses • Some oil companies’ CSR (Chevron)

  6. The uneasy NGO – government relationship • The urge for control • Pressure, intimidation, infiltration, co-option • Example: the closing of the OHCHR in Angola • Lack of consultation, ignoring consultations • FESA and Lwini • Government mistrustful view of “civil society” • Government counterweight CSOs • The revised Law on the Associations • Discipline NGOs (registration, reporting, “abstain from political and partisan actions”,government guardianship) • The revised Law on the Media • Government control of national broadcasting • Regulations of private media • Criminal responsibility of journalists and editors (defamation)

More Related