The Role of Civil Society Organizations in Democratic Governance in Local Government Setting


 


Grey areas, with likely occurrence of duplicate and overlapping functions, exist among general society regardless geographic locations they impact lack intrinsic term definitions to redefining democracy and how the building blocks are segmented appropriate to levels of common society in local, state, national and international levels. Specific elements attuned to the implementation of democracy as a vague term without redefining its functions in a hierarchy approach within the tide of civil society, civil society organizations, nongovernment organizations, state organization and international governing bodies, come to a surface needs reshaping that calls for a study for this quest (Al Amin, 2008).  There persists in concentrate portions of the globe especially developing countries the need to implement basic tools of pervasive understanding and resources to adapt to an increasing change in today’s global climate which accedes to the dynamics a global economy functions.


The current world with increasing earmarks of globalization since the 1990s gradual shift of respective economic, political and social landscapes require continuous remolding of society’s  basic perception to adapt to complex society of increased complications international businesses require.  The trend of global merging of companies and the dynamical interaction by all countries on a collective basis require a timely response critical to a full spectrum of issues. These issues correspond to principles demand to redefine terms on how social dynamics in general should respond to these changes in folds for an effective society ready to mobilize towards the inner circle of major economic players critical to the economic and political development of particular country or region.


Successful adoption of social norms and its building blocks ready to respond to the calls of globalization in a multi-facets approach compose critically good governance policies ingrained into civil society in the local levels. Civil society organizations intervene as the linkage between the local communities and state or national bodies. However, the success of civil society organizations depends critically from respective state and national levels which pattern their respective landscapes how public norms implement and whether these conform to legal and governmental policies that adapt to a global culture. The test of diversity to reckon the challenges for that specific region or country lay on the hands how civil society conducts itself on a daily basis, how the common good is widely observed by the common citizenry and how each individual regardless of background, ethnicity and culture perceives and responds to the high standards the state, national and international bodies practice, and how respective national legal structures ready themselves to adapt to rapid pace changes in highly volatile economic and international political markets these bodies associate to become collectively come to a blur as local, national and international civil societies  experience and the boundaries with its interests drawn are not in succinct definition and cohesion as the market, civil society and state overlap in function (Al Amin, 2008).This is the challenge where persistent gaps are present that require civil society organizations to focus for resolution.


Coordination with nongovernmental organizations should dominate over discussions within these localized bodies since they function  critical through the intermediation process due to their political clout associate with the extensive interaction and negotiation processes with international advocacy organizations. The World Bank, the United Nations and other international and regional bodies, in turn, link with community based organizations in enhancing possibilities to extend financial resources from the private and public sectors for funding purposes to institutionalize local educational and development programs for civil society organizations to act as they advocate local communities to promulgate accountability and performance measures and institutionalize increased infrastructure. Funding resources serve critical to keep local programs operational combined with proper audit measures to monitor performance, compliance and development of local community bodies and their programs.


 The case for the European Union implemented exactly this approach in its governance strategy by emphasis on institutional development to deal issues globalization presents in the sense public good acquisition on how these apply to local levels(Tomsek and Rek, p. 1). The role of civil society organizations in the European Union enhanced the policy process development in the legislative level to merge with central vertical and horizontal accountability permitting a voice position among the local communities to ascend to national levels. The introduction and assessment governance norms within democratic ideology in the region shed light on the specifics on respective roles of political institutions, civil associations and nonstate actors through the conduct of relevant empirical studies aim to explore the links of transnational civic organizations and mediate the citizenry to supranational levels by research conduct and coordination among the academe and policy levels to facilitate the coordination process with checks and balances typical in a democratic setting(Tomsek and Rek,pp 2-3).



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