Document Summary
Published:
2004
The riddle of the third sector: civil society, western aid and NGOs in Russia
This article explores the forms and logic of political activism encouraged by international development agencies in Russia, by focusing on the project to promote civil society development. It argues that the version of civil society that has been brought into being by western design - the third sector - is far from what Russian activists desired and what donor agencies promised. Despite its claims to allow a grassroots to flourish, the third sector is a professionalised realm of NGOs, inaccessible to most local groups and compromised by its links to a neoliberal vision of development. The article aims to push beyond polarised discussions of NGOs (where they are regarded as either good or bad) to show that despite its ambivalent effects, the idea of the third sector remains compelling to local actors. Drawing on extensive ethnographic fieldwork with provincial womens groups, the article examines local responses to the third sector and considers its unexpected signifying possibilities.



