This research note unveils new archival evidence from Amnesty International's first twenty-five years (1961-1986) to shed light on the realization of international human rights as Amnesty balanced "nonpolitical politics"through multifaceted government relations. The research draws from minutes and reports of eighty meetings of Amnesty's executive leadership and interviews from the 1983 to 1985 Amnesty Oral History project, all collected from the International Institute of Social History. The records show that during this time Amnesty relied on government and foundation funding to exit a severe financial crisis. Amnesty also cultivated a private diplomatic network with governments for access and advocacy and conducted side bargains with closed countries for access and reforms. In one sense, the new evidence complicates the conventional wisdom that Amnesty was only financed from small, individual donors and stayed away from private government dealings. In another sense, the new data extend existing insights about INGO strategic action by revealing Amnesty's pragmatic trade-offs when maintaining arms-length relations with governments to better appreciate the organization's early challenges and accomplishments. The note ultimately contributes to scholarship on the strategic choices of INGOs and provides new data for future research on the agency of nonstate actors in global governance navigating complex government relations.
CITATION STYLE
Srivastava, S. (2022). Navigating NGO-Government Relations in Human Rights: New Archival Evidence from Amnesty International, 1961-1986. International Studies Quarterly, 66(1). https://doi.org/10.1093/isq/sqab009
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