Legitimacy in non-profit organisations is deeply context-dependent, varying according to organisational type, political regime, and regional setting. This article analyses how credibility is constructed and contested across international and local NGOs, democratic and authoritarian environments, and Global North–South dynamics. It shows that INGOs often rely on epistemic legitimacy derived from expertise and donor access, while local NGOs draw on moral and representational legitimacy rooted in cultural proximity and community trust. Political regimes further shape legitimacy: democracies prioritise transparency and accountability, whereas authoritarian contexts constrain civic freedoms, compelling NGOs to rely on informal trust networks. Regional comparisons—from Latin America’s grassroots activism to Sub-Saharan Africa’s service orientation and Eastern Europe’s donor scepticism—reveal how history, culture, and governance structures influence non-profit credibility. The article argues that legitimacy is not a fixed attribute but a negotiated, relational process that requires balancing donor standards with community expectations and global norms with local authenticity.
Anna Neya Kazanskaia (Wed,) studied this question.