This article develops the conceptual foundations of grassroots leadership as a counterpoint to professionalized and donor-driven models of non-profit governance. It integrates insights from Paulo Freire’s pedagogy of the oppressed, feminist leadership traditions, and Indigenous perspectives to reveal grassroots leadership as a culturally embedded and relational practice grounded in participation, trust, and collective responsibility. The analysis contrasts community-based legitimacy with institutional authority and examines variations between the Global South—where grassroots leadership often emerges as a survival strategy—and the Global North, where it serves as a form of advocacy and civic mobilization. By recognizing both its transformative potential and its limitations, including the risks of co-optation and internal inequality, the article argues that grassroots leadership is best understood as a dynamic, dialogical process that challenges dominant paradigms and advances the democratization of civil society.
Anna Neya Kazanskaia (Wed,) studied this question.