Abstract

The end of the Cold War melted the bipolar world that arranged most every international policy in terms of West and East. Once freed from this aspic, nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) emerged on the world stage with new power and stature to shape agendas in international development. These changes have altered the face of international development assistance and presented new challenges for the design of new international development institutions and the continued relevance of the old. This Article takes up those challenges and, in doing so, fills a gap in two distinct but related bodies of scholarship. The post-Cold War growth of NGOs and their proper role in public international affairs has been the subject of a robust literature in legal scholarship. The impact of globalization on international development is also extensively discussed in scholarship on development economics and global justice.

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