The concept of legitimacy in the non-profit sector is undergoing profound transformation under the influence of digital technologies, political polarization, and decolonial critique. This article identifies three major shifts reshaping the foundations of non-profit credibility: the rise of digital legitimacy, the populist and nationalist backlash against NGOs, and the growing prominence of decolonial and community-based legitimacy frameworks. It shows how online visibility has become a key determinant of trust, while populist rhetoric increasingly delegitimises NGOs as foreign or elitist actors. Simultaneously, decolonial perspectives and localisation agendas call for legitimacy grounded in cultural embeddedness, relational accountability, and local leadership. The article argues that future legitimacy will depend less on donor validation and more on digital adaptability, political resilience, and community-rooted trust. It offers a forward-looking framework for both scholars and practitioners to understand and navigate the changing legitimacy landscape in a world marked by technological acceleration, political contestation, and calls for epistemic justice.
Anna Neya Kazanskaia (Wed,) studied this question.