Requesting Accountability. What is accountability? An entity (or individual) is accountable when its actions, practices and policies are open to inspection.

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Presentation transcript:

Requesting Accountability

What is accountability? An entity (or individual) is accountable when its actions, practices and policies are open to inspection by those whom they affect, those to whom they have obligations, and those who regulate them, and when there are clear consequences for actions, practices, or policies that are illegal, harmful, unethical, different from what was agreed upon, or incompetent.

Why might you request accountability? To assure that people are getting what they need To protect the public from harm, physical or otherwise To protect the public's right to know To encourage, and prevent retaliation for, whistleblowing To see that citizens are compensated for injury or loss caused by the intentional wrongdoing of some entity

Why might you request accountability? (cont.) To prevent the misuse of taxpayer funds that could better be spent elsewhere To assure that consumers get what they pay for To keep government, businesses, and institutions from acting unethically To procure simple justice

When might you seek accountability? When some members of the community are in need, and nothing is being done When an entity is about to, or continues to, do something harmful When economic damage s being, or about to be, done When a business wants to locate in a community

When might you seek accountability? (cont.) When an elected official or someone running for office has violated the public trust, has misrepresented his positions or background, or is otherwise unfit for public office When some individual or interest has unfairly or illegally influenced official policy or the votes of elected officials When a blatant injustice is about to be done

Who is accountable, and to whom? Elected and appointed government officials Law enforcement Government agencies Government contractors Nonprofits that seek money directly from the public Corporations Individuals trying to influence policy Individuals within an organization whose jobs give them power

How do you seek accountability? Do the necessary research Decide what kind of accountability you want Appeal directly to the entity Go to a regulatory agency for help Go public Institute direct action Engage in legislative advocacy to get new laws passed Sue