12 research outputs found

    Civil society and the state in Uganda’s AIDS response

    Get PDF
    This paper investigates state-civil society relations in the Ugandan AIDS response through a critical exploration of the history of Uganda’s ‘multi-sectoral’ and ‘partnership’ approaches, particularly as it pertains to The AIDS Support Organisation (TASO). It finds that the Ugandan government’s reputation for successful prevention campaigns is not necessarily deserved, and that the effectiveness of civil society is limited by an authoritarian political culture. Despite these limitations, however, state-civil society partnership did contribute to the emergence of a relatively effective coalition for action against HIV/AIDS. Donors were essential in encouraging the emergence of this coalition, but have also inadvertently undermined the emergence of strong and independent civil society voices able to hold the Ugandan state accountable

    “Muddling Through ” Past Legacies: Myanmar’s Civil Bureaucracy and the Need for Reform 1

    No full text
    All too often when discussing contemporary Myanmar, the focus tends to shift quickly to its national politics, its ethnic schisms, or its state-society relations, crowding out everything else. Some have referred to this phenomenon as the “hostage ” model—a one-dimensional approach to change in Myanmar in which any such discussion unrelate
    corecore