Civil society
Civil society is a vital component of governance and decentralization, the one
component that is supposed to vigilantly hold those in power accountable and to
promote democracy. Simply put, civil society is that sphere of action independent of
the State, within the realm of private sector and civil organizations, capable of
stimulating resistance to and change in undemocratic regimes. Civil society
organizations include non-governmental organizations, professional and private sector
associations and trade unions. They also include families, churches, neighborhood
groups, social groups and work groups. The capability and strength of civil society
depends on the operation of such organizations.(1)
A problem with civil society in the context of epidemics and pandemics, identified by
the HEG Expert Group Report, is that “civil society remains mostly the ‘weak part of the
picture’ or an obstacle to good implementation of measures, ‘something to be
‘educated’ and ‘informed’’, most solutions include improved communicating to civil
society but no real involvement of its relevant parts in the evaluation and management
of the crisis.”. The report raises a number of questions, like: “What processes,
pathways or organizational networks could be developed to facilitate interactions with
civil society?” and “What could be done to improve civil society’s long term resilience
with respect to pandemics”, and suggests possible solutions, such as novel o
rganisational or participatory ways to improve interaction, educational aspects,
improvement of fast access to trustworthy information and increased knowledge of
cultural and group-specific aspects of perceiving and managing threats. (2)
(1) United Nations Economic and Social Council, Definition of basic concepts and
terminologies in governance and public administration, UNESC Report, E/C.16/2006/4
(2) HEG Expert Group, Science, H1N1 and Society: towards a more pandemic-resilient
society, Final Report, 2011