Making Accountability Work: Dilemmas for Evaluation and for Audit

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· Comparative Policy Evaluation Book 1 · Transaction Publishers
Ebook
290
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About this ebook

Like honesty and clean water, "accountability" is invariably seen as a good thing. Conversely, the absence of accountability is associated with most of the greatest abuses in human history. Accountability is thus closely linked with the exercise of power and the legitimacy of policies and those pursuing them. This book looks at the role of evaluation and of audit as key elements in democratic accountability processes. The contributors explore the apparent paradox of there being more accountability-related activities today than ever before, at the same time as much public debate laments what is seen as a lack of actual accountability. Such a situation raises a number of questions: Is there a need for different approaches to establishing accountability or can current arrangements be modified to make them more effective? Are present practices part of the problem and are they preventing a mature debate about performance improvement taking place? How can systems awash with performance information ensure that at least some of it makes sense to a wide range of potential users? How is it that greater accountability and transparency can so quickly have become associated with concerns about perverse incentives and be seen by some as a costly burden? The volume includes detailed case studies and synthesizes up-to-date research evidence drawn from very different governmental systems, ending with practical advice for those involved in the accountability processes. In doing so, it attempts to address both conceptual ambiguities about the notion of "accountability" and the practical uncertainties over its implications for democratic government. This book is aimed at serious people who think about trends in the use of evaluation and audit in seeking to hold governments accountable for their actions and performance.

About the author

"Burt Perrin," an independent consultant based in France, has some thirty years' practical experience internationally in evaluation, policy and program development, and strategic planning, on behalf of governments, international organizations, and the private sector. Jeremy Lonsdale is a director at the National Audit Office in London, currently responsible for value of money audits on welfare and work topics. Marie-Louise Bemelmans-Videc is professor of public administration at the Radboud University of Nijmegen, a senator in the Netherlands Parliament and a former advisor on quality evaluation at the Netherlands Court of Audit.

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