The State-NGO partnership and the coordination of the local government, corporate sector, academics, intelligentsia and the civil society with the NGOs are discussed in resolving the socio-economic problems in the country.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
References
1.
AVARD (Association of Voluntary Agencies for Rural Development) (1991) –Role of NGOs in Development: A Study of the Situation in India (Final Country Report), New Delhi: AVARD.
2.
Bardhan, P. (1984)-The Political Economy Development in India, Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
3.
Chambers, R. (1993)-Challenging the Profession: Frontiers of Rural Development, London: I. T. Publications.
4.
Edwards, M. and D. Hulme (ed. 1992)-Marketing a Defference: NGOs and Development in Changing World, London: Earthsean Publications.
5.
Edwards, M. and D. Hulme (ed. 1995)-Non-Governmental Organisations, Performance and Accountability: Beyond the Magic Bullet, London: Earthsean.
6.
Farrington, J, and A, Babbington with K. Wells and D. Lewis (1993)-Reluctant Partners? NGOs, the State and Sustainable Development ‘, London: Routledge.
7.
Maheshwari, S. (1987)-‘Voluntary Action in Rural Development in India’, The Indian Journal of Public Administration, 33 (3): 559–68.
8.
Paul Chowdhury, D. (1987)-‘Critical Appraisal of Voluntary Effort in Social Welfare and Development Since Independence’, The Indian Journal of Public Administration. 33(3): 492–500.
9.
Roy, B. (1988)-‘Voluntary Agencies: Twenty Years from Now’, Mainstream, 26:17–19.
10.
Sen, S. (1999)-‘Some Aspects of State-NGO Relationship in India in the Post-Independence Era’, Development and Change, 30:327–55.
11.
Tandon, R. (1986)-‘Regulating NGOs: New Moves’, Lokayan Bulletin, 4(3-4):37–42.