057. From transnational advocacy networks to transscalar activism: Beth Bloodgood & Chris Pallas

Published: May 21, 2023, 2 p.m.

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Summary

What is \\u2018transscalar activism\\u2019 in a nutshell? And how is it different from what academics call the 'Boomerang' model of international advocacy NGO networks?

When did international NGO advocacy begin attracting the attention of academics, and why? What had shifted at that point, what had changed?

What was the dominant narrative in academia for a long time? And what was wrong with that?

In this NGO Soul+Strategy podcast episode, I interview Elizabeth Bloodgood, Associate Professor at Concordia University, Canada, and Christopher Pallas, Professor at Kennesaw University, USA, on major shifts in advocacy and campaigning approaches among NGOs. Trust me: their empirical research, based on practitioner case studies, is relevant for us practitioners.

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Elizabeth\\u2019s Bio:

  • Associate Professor at Concordia University in Montreal, Quebec, Canada
  • Lecturer in non-state actors at the University of Pennsylvania, USA
  • Assistant Professor at Dartmouth College, USA

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Christopher\\u2019s Bio:

  • Professor of Conflict Management at the Department of Political Science and International Affairs at Kennesaw University in Georgia, USA
  • His research focuses on nongovernmental organizations and their role in international policymaking and development

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We discuss:\\xa0

  • Chris and Beth argue that how we think about advocacy strategies in relation to the roles and practices of global North and global south founded NGOs is well overdue for an update
  • The argument they make in their 2022 book \\u2018Beyond the Boomerang: From Transnational Advocacy Networks to Transscalar Advoacy\\u2019\\xa0 is linked to hot topics of today, such as decolonizing aid, and a shift in power and agency between global South-founded and global North-founded NGOs \\u2013 a shift that Beth and Chris argue has already been well on its way for 10+ year.\\xa0
  • The era of the so-called \\u2018boomerang effect\\u2019\\xa0 model in global advocacy -- in which national-level global South-founded NGOs would link up to global North-founded NGOs on advocacy causes when they did not find their government to be responsive -- that era is over
  • Their argument as expressed in the book implies changes in what are legitimate, needed roles for global North-founded NGOs into the future.
  • National NGOs in the global South now choose at what scale to operate (thus the term \\u2018transscalar activism\\u2019) \\u2013 whether local, national, regional or global -- and these days ally with Southern CSOs as much as with global North-founded NGOs
  • This also means that we should expect to see that global South-founded NGOs will feel less obliged to engage in marketing and reframing of their local causes in order to get international partners or global-North based media on their side.\\xa0

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Resources:

Elizabeth\\u2019s LinkedIn Profile

Faculty page of Elizabeth

Faculty page of Christopher

Christopher\\u2019s Google Scholer page

Book: <&l

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