Accountability is seen as an essential feature of governments, businesses and NGOs. This volume treats it as a socially constructed means of control that can be used by the weak as well as the powerful. It contributes analytical depth to the diverse debates on accountability in modern organizations by exploring its nature, forms and impacts in civil society organizations, public and inter-governmental agencies and private corporations. The contributors draw from a range of disciplines to demonstrate the inadequacy of modern rationalist prescriptions for establishing and monitoring…mehr
Accountability is seen as an essential feature of governments, businesses and NGOs. This volume treats it as a socially constructed means of control that can be used by the weak as well as the powerful. It contributes analytical depth to the diverse debates on accountability in modern organizations by exploring its nature, forms and impacts in civil society organizations, public and inter-governmental agencies and private corporations. The contributors draw from a range of disciplines to demonstrate the inadequacy of modern rationalist prescriptions for establishing and monitoring accountability standards, arguing that accountability frameworks attached to principal-agent logics and applied universally across cultures typically fail to achieve their objectives. By examining a diverse range of empirical examples and case studies, this book underscores the importance of grounding accountability procedures and standards in the divergent cultural, social and political settings in which they operate.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Alnoor Ebrahim is a Visiting Associate Professor in the Hauser Center for Nonprofit Organizations at the John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University and the Wyss Visiting Scholar at the Harvard Business School. He is also an Associate Professor at Virginia Tech. Edward Weisband holds the Diggs Endowed Chair Professorship in the Social Sciences in the Department of Political Science at Virginia Tech.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction: 1. Forging global accountabilities Edward Weisband and Alnoor Ebrahim; Part I. Public Accountability: Participatory Spheres from Global to Local: 2. Multilateralism and building stronger international institutions Ngaire Woods; 3. Global financial governance and the problem of accountability: the role of the public sphere Randall D. Germain; 4. Citizen activism and public accountability: lessons from case studies in India Anne Marie Goetz and Rob Jenkins; Part II. Experiments in Forging NGO Accountability: Mutuality and Context: 5. Multiparty social action and mutual accountability L. David Brown; 6. Not accountable to anyone? Collective action and the role of NGOs in the campaign to ban 'blood diamonds' Ian Smillie; 7. Bringing in society, culture and politics: values and accountability in a Bangladeshi NGO David Lewis; Part III. Reflective Accountability: New Directions for Participatory Practice: 8. A rights-based approach to accountability Lisa Jordan; 9. Evaluation and accountability in emergency relief Coralie Bryant; 10. Towards a reflective accountability in NGOs Alnoor Ebrahim; Part IV. Global Accountability Frameworks and Corporate Social Responsibility: 11. Financial actors and instruments in the construction of global corporate social responsibility Michael R. MacLeod; 12. Public accountability within transnational supply chains: a global agenda for empowering southern workers? Kate Macdonald; 13. Tripartite multilateralism: why corporate social responsibility is not accountability Edward Weisband; Conclusion: 14. Prolegomena to a postmodern public ethics: images of accountability in global frames Edward Weisband.
Introduction: 1. Forging global accountabilities Edward Weisband and Alnoor Ebrahim; Part I. Public Accountability: Participatory Spheres from Global to Local: 2. Multilateralism and building stronger international institutions Ngaire Woods; 3. Global financial governance and the problem of accountability: the role of the public sphere Randall D. Germain; 4. Citizen activism and public accountability: lessons from case studies in India Anne Marie Goetz and Rob Jenkins; Part II. Experiments in Forging NGO Accountability: Mutuality and Context: 5. Multiparty social action and mutual accountability L. David Brown; 6. Not accountable to anyone? Collective action and the role of NGOs in the campaign to ban 'blood diamonds' Ian Smillie; 7. Bringing in society, culture and politics: values and accountability in a Bangladeshi NGO David Lewis; Part III. Reflective Accountability: New Directions for Participatory Practice: 8. A rights-based approach to accountability Lisa Jordan; 9. Evaluation and accountability in emergency relief Coralie Bryant; 10. Towards a reflective accountability in NGOs Alnoor Ebrahim; Part IV. Global Accountability Frameworks and Corporate Social Responsibility: 11. Financial actors and instruments in the construction of global corporate social responsibility Michael R. MacLeod; 12. Public accountability within transnational supply chains: a global agenda for empowering southern workers? Kate Macdonald; 13. Tripartite multilateralism: why corporate social responsibility is not accountability Edward Weisband; Conclusion: 14. Prolegomena to a postmodern public ethics: images of accountability in global frames Edward Weisband.
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