Power and influence are central to understanding how nonprofit organisations shape governance and public policy. This article synthesises leading theoretical frameworks—including Lukes’ multidimensional power model, Foucault’s power/knowledge, pluralist and elite theories, Habermas’ deliberative democracy, and policy process models by Kingdon and Sabatier—to explain how nonprofits affect agendas, norms, and decisions without formal authority. It argues that nonprofits wield discursive, relational, and epistemic power, shaping both the content and the context of policymaking. Yet their influence is conditioned by structural inequalities, donor dependencies, and legitimacy constraints. Through illustrative cases in transnational human rights, environmental advocacy, and grassroots mobilisation, the article demonstrates how nonprofits simultaneously democratise and reproduce power. The synthesis offers scholars a critical framework for analysing civil society influence and provides practitioners with strategies for coalition-building, knowledge production, and legitimacy management.
Anna Neya Kazanskaia (Wed,) studied this question.
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