Title: Defining standards for doing good: Examining NGO accountability
1Defining standards for doing good Examining NGO
accountability
- Maryam Zarnegar Deloffre
- Department of Political Science
- George Washington University
2Overall aims and research questions
- Examine how perceptions of NGO performance
evolved in the humanitarian sector
- Interested in accountability for what
- Investigate three failures in international
response Biafra, Rwanda, Kosovo, to examine how
these perceptions changed
3Overall aims and research questions
- Investigate how perceptions of NGO performance
shaped the development of transnational
self-regulatory accountability institutions such
as Sphere, HAP-I and the Quality Project - Institutions vary in how they approach
accountability
- Contestation regarding standards for humanitarian
action
4Overall aims and research questions
- Aim to clarify the benchmarks and standards used
to assess NGO performance
- Aim to tease out what distinguishes the NGO
sector from other sectors
- Aim to detail the dynamics of NGO governance
5Presentation of findings to date
- Data point 1 The rise of an accountability and
evaluation culture shaped NGOs and others
perceptions about NGO performance.
- 24 year period from 1969-1993 only 17
accountability institutions founded in
humanitarian sector
- 13 year post-Rwanda period 59 accountability
institutions founded
- Rwanda is the watershed event that highlights
shifts in expectations of NGOs
6Presentation of findings to date
- Linked to changes in standards for humanitarian
NGOs
- Shift from view of humanitarian aid as charity to
more complex notions of aid with a regard for
long-term impacts
- Discussions of the international responses to
Rwanda and Kosovo highlight this shift
7Presentation of findings to date
- Data point 2 NGO self-perceptions about their
performance during the Rwanda crisis sparked
increased attention to accountability
8Presentation of findings to date
- NGO self-assessments
- Led to great soul-searching, absolutely gripping
pain for years to try to work out what we can do
collectively as international organizations to
make sure that the failures did not happen
again. - Guilt was a big factorNGOs took on all of that
guilt, guilt as members of the humanitarian
community or the Westquality of our response
could have been better but we did respond and
stayed.
9Presentation of findings to date
- Data point 3 Of all the possible responses to
failures, accountability emerges as the solution
to problems in the NGO sector
- NGOs pursue accountability institutions
collectively for the first time
- NGOs focus on issues of accountability over other
issues such as capacity building, coordination
and access
10Presentation of findings to date
- Data point 4 Debates about accountability and
standards for humanitarian action reflect
conflicting notions of the role of NGOs as
service providers versus moral leaders in
international society
11Implications and Next Steps
- Provide further understanding of the role of NGOs
as moral leaders.
- Clarify accountability for whatthis will allow
NGOs to further improve the quality of
humanitarian assistance.
- Streamline accountability programs
- Deduce appropriate benchmarks for performance
12Implications and Next Steps
- Inform the on-going design of accountability
institutions
- Clarify core concepts and principles of
humanitarian action
- Increase dialogue among competing groups
13Implications and Next Steps
- Next steps
- Potential follow-up presentation at the next
Roundtable or InterAction annual meeting
- Explaining the emergence of accountability clubs
in the humanitarian sector the role of context
and shifting standards. In Nonprofit
Accountability Clubs Voluntary Regulation of
Nonprofit and Nongovernmental Organizations. Mary
Kay Gugerty Aseem Prakash (eds.) Cambridge
University Press, forthcoming.