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Civil Society Organizations are often perceived as being anti-State actors rather than non-State actors. Do you agree? Justify.

CSOs are non-state, non-profit entities that represent citizens’ interests and act as intermediaries between the state and the people. However, their role oscillates between cooperation (as development partners) and confrontation (as watchdogs).

Civil Society Organizations as Anti-State Actors – Arguments in Favour

CSOs frequently expose corruption, inefficiency, and rights violations by state institutions. Governments perceive such actions as hostile scrutiny.

Opposition to Government Policies and Projects – Eg- Narmada Bachao Andolan (NBA) opposed Sardar Sarovar dam project

National Security Concerns – Eg- 2014 Intelligence Bureau Report claimed foreign-funded NGOs caused a “2-3% GDP slowdown” by delaying energy and mining projects.

Mobilisation of Protests – CSOs lead agitations and mass movements that directly confront state authority. Eg- Anti-AFSPA protests in Manipur led by Irom Sharmila.

Foreign Funding Suspicions – Eg- FCRA action against Greenpeace India for alleged anti-development activities.

Use of PILs and Social Media Activism is perceived as obstruction. Eg- Citizens for Justice and Peace (CJP) filed petitions challenging the CAA and NRC.

Civil Society Organizations as Non-State but Not Anti-State Actors – Arguments Against

Complementing the State in Service Delivery – CSOs fill governance gaps in education, health, and rural development. Eg- Azim Premji Foundation Trust runs 3500+ schools

Policy Advocacy – Eg- MKSS inspired the Right to Information Act (2005)

CSOs empower citizens by promoting political awareness and participatory governance. Eg- ADR enhances electoral transparency through candidate data publication.

Humanitarian and Relief Support – Eg- Akshaya Patra Foundation distributed 200 million meals during COVID-19; Goonj provided relief materials during Kerala floods.

Promoting Inclusive Development – CSOs advance the goals of equity, gender justice, and social inclusion. Eg- Sakhi Resource Centre (Kerala)

CSOs help India align with SDGs and climate commitments, enhancing India’s global standing. Eg- WWF-India and TERI partner with MoEFCC for biodiversity programs.

Way Forward

Vijay Kumar Committee Recommendations: ‘Light regulation’ of NGO

2nd ARC: enact a law to set up an independent National Accreditation Council

Create formal government-NGO platforms (as in Kerala’s Kudumbashree).

Encourage Social Accountability Tools like Jan Sunwai, Community Scorecards, and Participatory Planning.

Shift from Confrontation to Collaboration – seeing CSOs as governance partners, not adversaries

NGOs are “integral cogs in the wheel of good governance”. A balanced partnership between genuine NGOs and the government is crucial for India’s progress.