Non-governmental organization (NGO) engagement in marine conservation can
be understood by analyzing the roles that such organizations play. Document and website
analysis and semi-structured interviews were used to identify five NGO roles: advocate,
expert, manager, watchdog and enabler. Semi-structured interviews were also used to
explore the nuances of the enabler role, an approach that works with and through
stakeholders to define and reach conservation goals.
Drivers of the enabler role were found to be organizational mission, conservation
context, and funding needs. Benefits of the enabler role were better coordination and
inclusivity, better long term conservation outcomes, targeting capacity and resource
needs, better access to some contexts, and extended organizational capacity and
resources. Challenges of the enabler role centered on resources needs, defining success
and walking away, engaging with stakeholders, and tensions between roles. Facilitating
factors included organizational trust, a commonly understood problem, and aligned
interests. Strategies for enabling were cultivating trust, working collaboratively, clear
communications, and shared responsibilities.
The typology and improved delineation of the enabler role presented here may aid
NGOs in explicitly identifying the approach(es) necessary to achieve their goals. It may
also help observers of the non-profit sector better frame discussion of how roles interact.
It is hoped that the systems understanding cultivated here provides organizations, funders
and scholars with a new lens into NGO engagement in marine conservation.Master of ScienceNatural Resources and EnvironmentUniversity of Michiganhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/99557/1/Crosman_Roles_of_NGOs_in_Marine_Conservation_Final.pd