Social Enterprise as a Sustainability Strategy for Local Ngos in Post-War Liberia

Authors

B. Abel Learwellie

PhD Student in Educational Psychology, Regent University, Virginia (USA)

Article Information

DOI: 10.47772/IJRISS.2026.10200471

Subject Category: Psychology

Volume/Issue: 10/2 | Page No: 6425-6444

Publication Timeline

Submitted: 2026-02-25

Accepted: 2026-03-02

Published: 2026-03-17

Abstract

Global development finance is increasingly characterized by volatility, donor reprioritization, and fiscal recalibration, reshaping the predictability of official development assistance (ODA) flows. In fragile and postwar contexts such as Liberia, where civil society organizations rely heavily on external grants, aid volatility constitutes a structural rather than episodic challenge. This study examines social enterprise as a sustainability strategy for local non-governmental organizations (NGOs) operating under conditions of systemic funding uncertainty. Using a qualitative conceptual synthesis methodology, the research integrates Aid Dependency Theory, Institutional Resilience Theory, and Hybrid Organization Theory to construct a unified analytical framework linking global aid volatility to institutional adaptation mechanisms.
The findings indicate that NGO fragility in post-war Liberia is architectural, rooted in restricted project-based financing, short planning horizons, and limited revenue diversification. Social enterprise, when strategically integrated and governed effectively, may function as a resilience-enhancing mechanism by diversifying revenue streams, strengthening absorptive capacity, and extending institutional planning horizons. However, enterprise integration introduces governance complexity and does not eliminate reliance on external funding. Rather than promoting abrupt financial independence, the study conceptualizes sustainability as incremental institutional strengthening through diversification, asset-building, and governance reform.
The analysis contributes theoretically by extending aid dependency logic to the organizational level and operationalizing resilience theory within fragile civil society environments. Practically, it highlights the shared responsibility of donors and NGOs in co-producing resilience through flexible funding frameworks and catalytic investment approaches.

Keywords

Social enterprise; NGO sustainability; Aid volatility; Institutional resilience; Hybrid organizations; Fragile states; Liberia.

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