Accountability in Practice: Mechanisms for NGOs

Author(s)
Ebrahim, A
Publication language
English
Pages
17pp
Date published
01 Jan 2003
Publisher
World Development Vol. 31, No. 5,
Type
Articles
Keywords
Accountability and Participation

This paper examines how accountability is practiced by nongovernmental organizations (NGOs). Five broad mechanisms are reviewed: reports and disclosure statements,
performance assessments and evaluations, participation, self-regulation, and social audits. Each mechanism, distinguished as either a ‘‘tool’’ or a ‘‘process,’’ is analyzed along three dimensions of accountability: upward–downward, internal–external, and functional–strategic. It is observed that accountability in practice has emphasized ‘‘upward’’ and ‘‘external’’ accountability to donors while ‘‘downward’’ and ‘‘internal’’ mechanisms remain comparatively underdeveloped. Moreover, NGOs and funders have focused primarily on short-term ‘‘functional’’ accountability responses at the expense of longer-term ‘‘strategic’’ processes necessary for lasting social and political change. Key policy implications for NGOs and donors are discussed.