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Increased
prominence and greater influence expose international
non-governmental development and environmental organizations (INGOs)
to increased demands for accountability from a wide variety of
stakeholdersdonors, beneficiaries, staffs, and partners among
others. This paper focuses on developing the concept of INGO
accountability, first as an abstract concept and then as a strategic
idea with very different implications for different INGO strategies.
We examine those implications for INGOs that emphasize service
delivery, capacity-building, and policy influence. We propose that
INGOs committed to service delivery may owe more accountability to
donors and service regulators; capacity-building INGOs may be
particularly obligated to clients whose capacities are being
enhanced; and policy influence INGOs may be especially accountable
to political constituencies and to influence targets. INGOs that are
expanding their activities to include new initiatives may need to
reorganize their accountability systems to implement their
strategies effectively.
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