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CPED Monograph Series No. 7-The State and Civil Society in Nigeria- Towards a Partnership for Sustai
註釋The rethinking of the development discourse international community and by the late 1980s particularly in relation governments have tended to embrace to the continued roles of the state, the CS with high hopes and potentialities as need for private sector driven capable of redressing the character of development and the possible roles of the post colonial states and contributing the non state sect. [...] raises issues of current popularity of civil society in the development This perception of centrality and even discourse of development countries of indispensability has driven the following the prolonged crises of the proliferation, funding, support and state, governance and development, and increasing relevance of CSOs such that economic decline since the 1980s and they have grown in leaps and b. [...] The competence and strength of the 2:1 THE POST COLONIAL state is particularly critical to the STATE AND THE CRISES OF THE performance of developmental roles. [...] The civil society organization tolerance and cooperation; adherence to (CSO) is the major non-state structure rules; respect for rights, the freedom of by which people relate to themselves action of the citizenry and the diffusion and through which they relate to the of power vested in CS groups and state and socio-political purposes. [...] 2:4 THE CONCEPT OF Civil society is seen as remaining SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT central to the political participation and empowerment of the citizenry, the The World Commission on protection of rights and freedoms, the Environment and Development maintenance of stake in the way society (WCED, 1987) defines sustainable is run, the sharing of the public domain, development as a: sustaining pressures.