GSDRC

Governance, social development, conflict and humanitarian knowledge services

  • Research
    • Governance
      • Democracy & elections
      • Public sector management
      • Security & justice
      • Service delivery
      • State-society relations
      • Supporting economic development
    • Social Development
      • Gender
      • Inequalities & exclusion
      • Poverty & wellbeing
      • Social protection
    • Conflict
      • Conflict analysis
      • Conflict prevention
      • Conflict response
      • Conflict sensitivity
      • Impacts of conflict
      • Peacebuilding
    • Humanitarian Issues
      • Humanitarian financing
      • Humanitarian response
      • Recovery & reconstruction
      • Refugees/IDPs
      • Risk & resilience
    • Development Pressures
      • Climate change
      • Food security
      • Fragility
      • Migration & diaspora
      • Population growth
      • Urbanisation
    • Approaches
      • Complexity & systems thinking
      • Institutions & social norms
      • Theories of change
      • Results-based approaches
      • Rights-based approaches
      • Thinking & working politically
    • Aid Instruments
      • Budget support & SWAps
      • Capacity building
      • Civil society partnerships
      • Multilateral aid
      • Private sector partnerships
      • Technical assistance
    • Monitoring and evaluation
      • Indicators
      • Learning
      • M&E approaches
  • Services
    • Research Helpdesk
    • Professional development
  • News & commentary
  • Publication types
    • Helpdesk reports
    • Topic guides
    • Conflict analyses
    • Literature reviews
    • Professional development packs
    • Working Papers
    • Webinars
    • Covid-19 evidence summaries
  • About us
    • Staff profiles
    • International partnerships
    • Privacy policy
    • Terms and conditions
    • Contact Us
Home»GSDRC Publications»Restricting space for civil society

Restricting space for civil society

Helpdesk Report
  • Siân Herbert
August 2015

Question

What is the recent evidence of a global trend toward restricted space for civil society? Is the trend specific to particular thematic areas? In 2-3 case study countries, what were the underlying drivers behind the restrictions; and what impacts are the restrictions having on affected organisations and the outcomes they are trying to achieve

Summary

There is consensus in the literature reviewed for this rapid query that the space for civil society to act has been increasingly restricted in the past decade. This is a global phenomenon – occurring in different ways and not in all countries – but in all regions of the world. It is occurring in all regime types – not just authoritarian countries. However, at the same time, in some contexts, civil society has acquired new spaces and enabling environments.

Key findings of the review include:

  • Restrictions on civil society space come from a range of actors employing a mix of legal or quasi-legal, bureaucratic, financial, political, and security related methods. The literature explores a number of overlapping methods, including: restrictions to the formation, registration, operation and funding of civil society organisations (CSOs); restrictions of rights to freedom of assembly, expression and association; physical attacks; verbal and reputational attacks; restrictions to the enabling environment of civil society; and co-option of civil society groups by government or other actors.
  • 44 percent of countries across the world have legislation specifically restricting foreign non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and/or foreign funding. This has increased over time. There have been an increasing number of physical and verbal attacks on CSOs and human rights activists. In response to large-scale civic mobilisations across the world, many governments have increased restrictions against the right to peaceful assembly. In 2014 CIVICUS documented ‘significant attacks’ on fundamental civil society rights of free association, free assembly and free expression in 96 countries. Freedom House (2015) found for the ninth consecutive year an overall decline in global political rights and civil liberties. The International Center for Not-for-Profit Law (ICNL) identifies that restrictions on the right to freedom have been growing in recent years across all regions and regime types in the world.
  • Across thematic areas, groups are targeted most where they are seen to challenge power, corruption, or the interests of dominant political parties, national or economic actors. Mostly, governments use restrictions to target groups who they feel threatened by, or where targeting them benefits the government in some way. Civil society actors that engage in politically-sensitive activities or human rights and democracy-related activities are particularly targeted.
  • General drivers are thought to include: concerns around sovereignty or foreign influence in domestic/national affairs; concerns over terrorism and extremism which have prompted states to exercise more control over CSOs; aid effectiveness principles; political elites seeing civil society as a threat to political power; and concerns over the legitimacy and accountability of some NGOs.
  • General impacts are thought to include: organisations shifting to work on less sensitive issues, or to funding civil society through the government; organisations being shut down by governments or put into bureaucratic limbo; organisations shutting due to restrictions on foreign funding; organisations attempting to represent themselves differently to the host government.
file type icon See Full Report [PDF - 861 KB]

Enquirer:

  • DFID

Suggested citation

Herbert, S. (2015). Restricting space for civil society. (GSDRC Helpdesk Research Report 1266). Birmingham, UK: GSDRC, University of Birmingham.

Related Content

Trends in Conflict and Stability in the Indo-Pacific
Literature Review
2021
Faith-based organisations and current development debates
Helpdesk Report
2020
Responding to popular protests in the MENA region
Helpdesk Report
2020
Support for civil society engagement in peace processes
Helpdesk Report
2019

University of Birmingham

Connect with us: Bluesky Linkedin X.com

Outputs supported by DFID are © DFID Crown Copyright 2025; outputs supported by the Australian Government are © Australian Government 2025; and outputs supported by the European Commission are © European Union 2025

We use cookies to remember settings and choices, and to count visitor numbers and usage trends. These cookies do not identify you personally. By using this site you indicate agreement with the use of cookies. For details, click "read more" and see "use of cookies".