Connecting the Dots for Accountability: Civil Society Policy Monitoring and Advocacy Strategies

Mar 1, 2016

March 2016 | by the Transparency & Accountability Initiative

connecting-dots-ibpIn the past decade, efforts to promote more open and accountable governance have proliferated.  These endeavors have taken on many shapes and sizes, from international multi-stakeholder initiatives to community-level citizen action, and everything in between.  Most often, these approaches have sought to leverage elements of transparency and information along with some form of citizen engagement or participation, with the goal of influencing government actions to be more responsive and accountable.  But has the formula of transparency + participation = accountability really worked?

Civil society organizations (CSOs) have often been at the front lines of these efforts, whether it be advocating for improved policies, monitoring government actions, mounting legal challenges to ensure accountability, or any number of other strategies.  But do all these individual initiatives and approaches, many of which result in specific wins, really to add up to more than the sum of their parts?  Furthermore, do external actors too often focus on a relatively narrow set of civil society actors, specifically formal and professional CSOs, failing to engage with diverse membership-based organizations, grassroots movements, and other kinds of citizen mobilization?

In June 2015, researchers and practitioners from the global north and south met to discuss more strategic approaches to citizen-led accountability.  Specifically, the workshop organizers sought to explore how CSO efforts could ‘connect the dots’ in ways that involve multiple actors, tools and tactics, and levels of governance.  This report draws on the practical experiences and conceptual insights shared during the workshop.  Key sections include:

  • Conceptual framework for connecting the dots
  • Five concrete case study summaries of CSO strategies to connect the dots
  • Workshop rapporteur’s report with insights organized around 8 key takeaway points

This report serves as a resource to those who want to address the challenge of isolated and fragmented transparency and accountability interventions that often do not strategically engage with the ecosystem of accountability actors, mechanisms and levels of governance to address the structural causes of corruption, impunity and poor service delivery, but rather more superficial symptoms.

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