In the tension between the local and the global: A field study about organizational and cultural challenges faced by NGO:s working with orphans and vulnerable children in Gaborone; Botswana
Abstract
The HIV and AIDS epidemic in sub-Saharan Africa calls a great national and global response in order to face the challenges associated with the illness for the individual, households, community and future of nations. The disease has led to an increased number of orphans and other vulnerable children in Botswana where the non-governmental organizations stand for social service delivery to these children. However, this is not without challenges and pressure for adaption from other organizations. The NGO staff members carry out their work within this organizational context between a variety of influences and relations that are reflected in terms of challenges they define. A wide range of strategies are used by the actors and organizations to deal with these barriers. Therefore, it is of importance to explore the NGO staff member’s experiences of their work in relation to an institutional perspective, which this study intends to do. The focus of the analysis was on separating the material into categories that answer the research aim by using influences from the coding process of grounded theory. The results demonstrated that the NGOs work within local and global tensions in their organizational fields including the ability to preserve traditional practices and adapt to international changes. This for the organizations to be able to gain legitimacy, receive funds and continue to provide their services to orphans and other vulnerable children in the country.
Other articles
Care of Orphans: Fostering Interventions for Children Whose Parents Die of AIDS in Ghana
One of the devastating social problems associated with HIV/AIDS is the increasing number of children who are orphaned within…
Read moreWithout a Family Orphans of the Postwar Period
The article examines the situation in post-World War II Soviet orphanages and concludes that there, as elsewhere, the level…
Read moreThe care of orphans in the Islamic tradition, vulnerable children, and child sponsorship programs
One of the most favored objects for Muslim charitable works is the care of orphans. The Prophet Muhammad was an orphan himself:…
Read moreExperiences of orphan care in Amach, Uganda: assessing policy implications
Uganda is estimated to have around two million orphans constituting approximately 19% of all the children in the country.…
Read more