This article examines real-world cases that reveal how non-profit organisations translate resources and processes into social transformation. Through comparative analysis of four emblematic examples—the International Campaign to Ban Landmines (ICBL), BRAC in Bangladesh, the Treatment Action Campaign (TAC) in South Africa, and the Kony 2012 initiative—it illustrates diverse pathways of advocacy, service delivery, and cultural mobilisation. The ICBL demonstrates the power of framing and coalition-building in achieving policy reform, while BRAC shows how community-based service delivery can evolve into national systems of provision. TAC exemplifies grassroots activism’s capacity to reshape social norms and institutions, and Kony 2012 underscores the risks of elite-driven, decontextualised advocacy. Together, these cases highlight that NGO impact is relational, hybrid, and context-dependent—emerging from the interaction of legitimacy, structure, and environment. By integrating success and failure, the article underscores that effectiveness cannot be abstracted from practice and context.
Anna Neya Kazanskaia (Wed,) studied this question.