NGOs, identities, and religion: a case of split personalities?

The past two decades have seen considerable worldwide growth in the size and influence of NGOs (Non-Governmental Organisations). Some 3,451 NGOs were listed as having consultative status by the United Nations in 2007. Using a more relaxed definition of ?NGO?, some commentators have estimated the num...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Adams, P., De Bussy, Nigel
Format: Journal Article
Published: Deakin University Australia 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/15113
_version_ 1848748806599868416
author Adams, P.
De Bussy, Nigel
author_facet Adams, P.
De Bussy, Nigel
author_sort Adams, P.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description The past two decades have seen considerable worldwide growth in the size and influence of NGOs (Non-Governmental Organisations). Some 3,451 NGOs were listed as having consultative status by the United Nations in 2007. Using a more relaxed definition of ?NGO?, some commentators have estimated the number of such organisations an order of magnitude higher (Mathews 1997). One explanation for the expansion of the sector is that NGOs meet societal needs which corporations and governments either cannot or will not, thus circumventing problems inherent to both profit maximisation and bureaucratic structures (Seibel and Anheier 1990). It is therefore ironic that many NGOs, established as a necessary alternative to commercial enterprises, are increasingly run on corporate lines (James 1997). This trend is especially apparent in the corporate identities leading NGOs develop and project to their stakeholders through the deployment of strategic communication programs. This paper presents a comparative case study of the Australian arms of two well-known international NGOs, both operating in the same sector (humanitarian aid). One of the organisations in question is religiously-based, the other is secular in nature. The study found that the RNGO (Religiously-based Non-Governmental Organisation) deliberately downplays its religious identity in order to succeed in an increasingly secular Australian social environment. The implications for organisational identity and identification in the NGO sector are discussed. To some extent it appears inevitable that NGOs must cultivate a split personality to achieve their goals, creating both ethical and practical dilemmas for their public relations advisers.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T07:10:54Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-15113
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T07:10:54Z
publishDate 2008
publisher Deakin University Australia
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-151132017-01-30T11:47:57Z NGOs, identities, and religion: a case of split personalities? Adams, P. De Bussy, Nigel Religion vs Secular Public relations Non-Governmental Organisations Comparative case study The past two decades have seen considerable worldwide growth in the size and influence of NGOs (Non-Governmental Organisations). Some 3,451 NGOs were listed as having consultative status by the United Nations in 2007. Using a more relaxed definition of ?NGO?, some commentators have estimated the number of such organisations an order of magnitude higher (Mathews 1997). One explanation for the expansion of the sector is that NGOs meet societal needs which corporations and governments either cannot or will not, thus circumventing problems inherent to both profit maximisation and bureaucratic structures (Seibel and Anheier 1990). It is therefore ironic that many NGOs, established as a necessary alternative to commercial enterprises, are increasingly run on corporate lines (James 1997). This trend is especially apparent in the corporate identities leading NGOs develop and project to their stakeholders through the deployment of strategic communication programs. This paper presents a comparative case study of the Australian arms of two well-known international NGOs, both operating in the same sector (humanitarian aid). One of the organisations in question is religiously-based, the other is secular in nature. The study found that the RNGO (Religiously-based Non-Governmental Organisation) deliberately downplays its religious identity in order to succeed in an increasingly secular Australian social environment. The implications for organisational identity and identification in the NGO sector are discussed. To some extent it appears inevitable that NGOs must cultivate a split personality to achieve their goals, creating both ethical and practical dilemmas for their public relations advisers. 2008 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/15113 Deakin University Australia restricted
spellingShingle Religion vs Secular
Public relations
Non-Governmental Organisations
Comparative case study
Adams, P.
De Bussy, Nigel
NGOs, identities, and religion: a case of split personalities?
title NGOs, identities, and religion: a case of split personalities?
title_full NGOs, identities, and religion: a case of split personalities?
title_fullStr NGOs, identities, and religion: a case of split personalities?
title_full_unstemmed NGOs, identities, and religion: a case of split personalities?
title_short NGOs, identities, and religion: a case of split personalities?
title_sort ngos, identities, and religion: a case of split personalities?
topic Religion vs Secular
Public relations
Non-Governmental Organisations
Comparative case study
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/15113