Css Essay Data For Accountablity 2
Css Essay Data For Accountablity 2
Fayyaz Yaseen
The opinions expressed in the papers are solely those of the authors, and publishing them does
not in any way constitute an endorsement of the opinion by the SDPI.
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Social Accountability in Pakistan
1. Introduction
According to the World Bank definition, Social Accountability (SAc) is the concept that revolves
around the participation of citizens and civil society organizations in public decision-making
process (World Bank, 2005). The DFID defines it as ‘The ability of the citizens, civil society and
the private sector to scrutinize public institutions and governments and to hold them to account”
(DFID, 2009). It is the idea that lays the foundation for good governance – one of the most
desired phenomena for successive governments in Pakistan.
The ‘Social Accountability’ jargon is quite new to citizens and civil society in Pakistan. However,
the essence that it captures, and demands that it puts forth before the governments is not new,
as the social scientists have long been demanding for transparency driven from citizen’s access
to information and fair use of country’s economic and social resources through participatory
governance (Ismail and Rizvi, 2000). While referring to Pakistan’s acute governance crisis that
remained unresolved throughout dictatorial and democratic regimes, it has been observed that
the issue finds its roots in the country’s legislative and administrative framework that hinders
transition towards a decentralized local government system and promotes and protects the
corrupt and impede the creation and promotion of institutionalization of standard governance
practices (Ismail and Rizvi, 2000).
Despite having varied definitions for good governance, there has been a wider consensus
among the social scientists in Pakistan that the biggest impediment on the way to achieving the
phenomena is lack of ‘accountability’ of the public office-bearers and the service providers.
Perhaps it was the reason that after ousting Nawaz Sharif’s elected government in a military
coup in October 1999, the then Army Chief General Pervez Musharraf tried to justify his act by
promulgating the National Accountability Ordinance, which culminated in the creation of
National Accountability Bureau(NAB) and promised accountability of all the corrupt. However,
as expected, the promise could never be fulfilled and soon after its creation, NAB appeared to
be another source of political victimization, validating the point that supply side accountability
mechanism is always prone to be misused.
Observing examples and situations similar to those in Pakistan and in other developing
countries, the international interest has grown into the concept of Social Accountability where it
is the media and civil society that has started demanding transparent governments and
improved service delivery (Smulovitz and Peruzzotti 2000). Emerging as a tool that
complements the process of accountability through electoral process, the SAc has ensured that
the civil society can also be a decisive force in ensuring quality service delivery (DFID July
2006).
The realization that promoting social accountability in Pakistan can be a catalyst to good
governance came rather late to Pakistan (WBI, 2007). However, the idea has started picking up
in last few years. The credit for this realization mainly goes to international donors and the civil
society organizations that took initiatives to educate masses on the importance of good
governance and presented with the tools that can be applied to ensure quality public service
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delivery. And of course to the media that highlighted the success stories and played a role in
increased public confidence in its power to hold the public officials accountable.
The present research paper is relevant for three reasons. Firstly, this is an election year in
Pakistan and thanks to a relatively free media; the masses in the country are looking forward to
new government that while ensuring transparency and answerability, it may overcome rampant
corruption and address the inadequate accountability of state institutions. Secondly, considerate
of the presently ineffective system of governance, at least in their verbal election manifestos, the
political leaders have pledge to make government institutions responsive to the public needs to
attain a good governance agenda. And finally, in the quest for inclusive growth and
development and empowerment of the marginalized, there is a greater call for participatory
governance among civil society groups. In these ways, this paper is an endeavor to facilitate
these groups in deciding how to move forward.
Focusing on these ideas, the first section of this paper briefly elaborates the definitions of Social
Accountability and dwells on to the question as to why the societies need it. The second section
of the paper takes stock of the social accountability evolution in Pakistan, and also notes the
SAc exercises conducted by various national and international organizations so far. Section
three highlights some of the challenges that the social accountability initiatives face in Pakistan.
Section four dwells onto the gaps or hindrances that have impeded or lessened the impact of
social accountability initiatives in the country. Section five elaborates the renewed urgencies for
the promotion of Social Accountability in Pakistan, while section six dwells onto some of the
opportunities or factors upon which the SAc initiatives in the country bank on. Finally, the
seventh and last section of the paper presents with some of the suggestions for donors, CSOs
and the government to deepen the SAc related developments in Pakistan.
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Social Audits at district levels. This was perhaps the first time when one of the SAc tools was
implemented in Pakistan.
Back in 1999, the Canadian International Development Agency implemented a project named
‘Communication for Effective Social Service Delivery (CESSD) in Pakistan’. The first phase of
the project, implemented across North West Frontier Province (presently known as Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa), was initiated with the help of provincial and local governments. Until 2007, the
project team worked with five district governments along with some select sub-district and
village level public officials and NGOs. The goal of the project was to deliver decentralized
social services through enhanced community participation. The most visible success in
promoting citizens’ participation for quality public service delivery was marked by CESSD
through the establishment of Community Citizens Boards (CCBs). The members of these
boards were provided with formal training for enhanced capacity to directly receive development
funds and to utilize those funds for community development projects at grass roots level. The
experience shared by the Social Audits and the CESSD greatly helped sensitized the
government officials in realizing the effectiveness of citizens’ engagement for effective service
delivery. After 2008, the provincial governments tried to roll back the local governance system
by delaying the local government polls, so the SAc practices that had started taking roots in the
society suffered a major blow. Though there have been isolated initiatives on the government’s
part where promotion of social accountability was stressed, they could not be scaled up.
The government’s initiatives to promote social accountability in Pakistan have essentially not
been rooted in community’s demands. Rather, they have been mainly driven by the need and
wish to please the international financial institution and donors – mainly IMF and the World
Bank. On the basis of data taken from a WB-funded project on Health in Sindh during 1990 to
1999, researchers (Israr, et al.,2006) argue that good governance, characterized by
transparency, accountability and citizen’s participation play critical role in sustaining the donor-
funded projects. That’s why, the successive governments have been implementing donor-
funded projects while adhering to certain accountability measures.
As for as the promotion of accountability to achieve good governance is concerned, the
researchers and social scientists find it greatly contingent upon ‘external accountability’ or
‘vertical accountability’ rather than the ‘internal’ or ‘horizontal accountability’ (Ahmed, R, 2008).
However, what the governments in Pakistan have been trying to promote is more of a reflection
of the former than the latter. This approach led to creating a greater room for civil society
intervention. Mainly supported by external donors, lately, the CSOs have taken initiatives to
influence government priorities for spending on and reforming the public service delivery.
Initiated by a large number of donors, including the World Bank, the Asian Development Bank,
and the United Nations, the implementation of social accountability tools in Pakistan has also
attracted the Asia Foundation, DFID, USAID, Affiliated Network for Social Accountability (ANSA)
and the International Budget Project. The organizations that have led the process locally
include: Sustainable Development Policy Institute (SDPI), Community Information and
Empowerment Technologies (CIET), Devolution Trust for Community Empowerment (DTCE),
Mahbub-ul-Haq Human Development Centre, Social Policy Development Centre (SPDC), Heart
file, Governance Institutes’ Network International (GINI), Pakistan Institute of Development
Economics (PIDE), Omar Asghar Khan Foundation (OAKF), Centre for Peace and Development
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Initiatives (CPDI), Shehri Organization, Hisaar Foundation, CESSD, the Consumer Network,
Transparency International and the ActionAid. The social accountability tools that have been
implemented by these organizations include: Participatory Budgeting, Public Expenditure
Tracking Surveys, Monitoring of Public Service Delivery, Citizen Report Cards, Community
Score Cards, Investigative Journalism, Public Commissions and Citizen Advisory Boards.
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tools. In fact not only implementation of the SAc tools, they usually hinder all sorts of interaction
of the development organizations with their communities. In rural areas of Gujranwala and
Gujrat, it happened several times when the civil society organizations were threatened to leave
the areas while communities were threatened not to welcome and cooperate with the NGO
representatives. Same hostile behaviors have been reported by the organizations struggling to
work with the communities where religious fundamentalists have hold of the local political and
administrative structure.
3.4. Weak/ no Implementation of Right to Information Act:
“Public’s Access to Information is frequently referred to as an important pre-condition to
responsive and accountable public institutions” (Coventry and Hussein, 2010). After 10 years of
the promulgation of Right to Information Ordinance (October 2002) and a very recent
incorporation of Article 19-A into the Constitution regarding right to information being the basic
and fundamental rights of the citizens across Pakistan, the matching mechanism is yet to be
worked out that may ensure public offices’ compliance to this new part of the Constitution.
The researchers’ believe that a conducive environment for SAc cannot be created unless there
is a regular availability of reliable and relevant information. The access to information should not
only be free, but also in an easy to understand way.
3.5. Centralization
Pakistan emulates a centralized governance system, where instead of institutions, individuals
(usually politicians) wield all the power and authority and exercise the same without any regard
to the law and Constitution.
3.6. CSOs’ weak governance and accountability mechanisms
Currently, the civil society organizations are leading the initiatives to promote social
accountability to fix the governance crisis in Pakistan. However, not all of the civil society
organizations adhere to the standard governance and accountability systems. Many of the
CSOs discourage discussions on their own transparency and accountability, which puts their
credibility under question. Weak governance and accountability systems of those very
proponents of social accountability organizations leave their voices less reliable before the
masses and shake their trust in the idea of governance through participation.
Unless we overcome these six major challenges, the promotion of social accountability in
Pakistan will not become smooth, and will always provide a chance to its opponents to disrupt
the process citing these excuses.
3.7. Absence of an enabling Environment
The enabling environment for the promotion of social accountability in Pakistan is missing. By
enabling environment, we mean there is an absence of matching legal and regulatory
frameworks, policies, an accommodating political environment and an accessible, open and
receptive government. Many of the successful SAc tools implementation exercises on the part
of civil society organizations could not yield the desired results as due to the legal and
constitutional loopholes, despite expressing their discontent from the quality of public service
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delivery through community score cards and citizen report cards, the citizens could not actually
hold the service providers/public officials to account.
3.8. Political and institutional capacity of the government and the civil society:
Amid an elite captured political system in Pakistan, the political and institutional capacity of the
government to respond to the rights and entitlements, security and social justice needs of the
masses has weakened. The researchers note that social accountability initiatives can be
effective and sustainable only when they are institutionalized. And the state is obliged to
cooperate in broader accountability projects and it facilitates and strengthens the civic
engagement into the process. Also, the civil society lacks the capacities and capabilities to
convince and realize the government for its constitutional obligation to be accountable to the
masses.
3.9. Absence of Performance Benchmarks
There is hardly any public service in Pakistan that is benchmarked. Thus, the researchers and
social scientists implementing social accountability tools like Citizen Report Cards and
Community Score Cards serve their firsts of initiatives to set the benchmarks, which are later on
used for comparisons. Against these benchmarks, gradual improvement in the public services
after citizens’ engagement is measured over time.
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law, voice and accountability, corruption control and state capture have indicated that a greater
focus on external accountability can lead to improve governance.” Ahmed also notes that the
SAc initiatives can only be fruitful when they are institutionalized and when besides vertical
accountability, state’s internal or horizontal accountability mechanisms are also strong and
transparent. In this context, when we analyze the social accountability exercises in Pakistan, we
find the following gaps that have hindered the SAc initiatives from attaining the desired success.
4.1. Missing of required skills
“Every SAc initiative must have a detailed training strategy for both the citizens and the officials
concerned, who have assigned roles in the programs”. The biggest stakeholders of the Social
Accountability process usually lack the skills and resources to conduct it at their own. As the
researchers describe it, “Poor people are the greatest beneficiaries of effective social
accountability initiatives as they are the most reliant on government services and least equipped
to hold government officials accountable” (Malena, Foster and Singh, 2004)
4.2. No donor support to build supply side capacity
The Social Accountability agenda in Pakistan has so far been supported by the donors, who
have mainly focused on building capacities on demand side of the equations. For these
initiatives to be effective, it is imperative for the donors to finance the initiatives that build supply
side capacities (public officials, politicians, policy-makers etc.) as well.
4.3. Women’s voice/role is usually neglected
While building communities’ capacity to account the public officials for the provision and quality
of public service delivery, disadvantaged groups, especially women’s role and their voices are
neglected by the CSOs. Being equally valuable stakeholders, their say and voice should also be
considered equally important by the CSOs soliciting communities’ responses.
4.4. No focus on reforms
The SAc initiatives so far have had a case to case or sector to sector focus, not many of them
struggled to sensitize the policy-makers for reforms in the desired direction.
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Malala Yousafzai’s incident also marks urgency for the Social Accountability. The young girl,
who was targeted by the Taliban, only used to exercise her right of expression through which
she exhibited her love for education. She also condemned the violence at the hands of militants,
who blew up many schools in the area and threatened the girls and teachers from going to
school. In this case too, the state failed to protect a student, who exercised her right to express.
The rise of social accountability can compel the government to ensure enough protection to the
locals in the area so that this right might be exercised without any fear or oppression.
In other issues of similar nature, both in Balochistan and the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, the border
security forces, in the name of targeting militants and insurgents, are reportedly committing
tyrannies against the local people. If the people are made aware of their right to account the
public officials, they can compel the latter to overcome such oppressions.
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6.3. Politically aware and charged masses
Amid greater exposure to media, the masses in Pakistan are far more politically aware and
charged to struggle for their rights. If educated and properly mobilized, they can readily own and
stand behind the initiatives that ensure civic engagement in public decision-making process.
6.4. Strengthened civil society
Civil society in Pakistan has recently witnessed great success. Lately, it has fought against and
ousted a dictatorial regime, despite severe opposition from the government; it has got the
judiciary restored, and important bills passed on women rights. Banking on media freedom, civil
society has greatly added strength to its voice. If civil society is sensitized to collectively take up
the idea, it can be of great help for the promotion of social accountability in the country.
6.5. Receptive political parties:
Amid free media and a vibrant and vocal civil society, political parties in Pakistan have
experienced a great evolution. Now they are open and more receptive to new ideas. Marking
their presence on social media as well to have a direct contact with the society, they now act
faster on public demands. Taking advantage of such a situation, the civil society and media can
convince them to include promotion of civic engagement in public decision-making process into
their manifestos. Furthermore, civil society organizations working to promote social
accountability in the country can arrange orientation sessions and training workshops for
parliamentarians. Through these workshops, their understanding of social accountability and its
virtues for a just and fair society can be improved. Besides, through this engagement, they can
be persuaded to play their role for necessary SAc related legislation in Pakistan.
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ii. Legal and regulatory environment be strengthened for freedom and pluralism in
access to information. Further, there should be constitutional protection for the
whistle blowers unmasking the corruption and abuse of power and values.
iii. Communication mechanism with the vulnerable groups – women, minorities, ultra
poor, be strengthened – like in case of PEMRA, it has established a 24/7 hotline
where complaints from the citizens can be lodged if and when they notice any
unethical content on the media. In the similar way, hotlines can be established by
other public service providers e.g. NEPRA, PTCL, WASSA etc.
iv. Besides leading demand-led initiatives, donors should also focus on building capacity
on supply side of the equation – political and institutional capacity of the government
be worked upon, and there must be a synergy between the two. For this, training
workshops of public officials on social accountability can be organized and essential
technical support can be provided through comprehensive manuals.
v. There must be a good understanding of ‘political economy’ of governance issues in
the country among the SAc initiative leaders so that accountability interventions can
be aligned with other governance developments.
vi. Communities’ role be strengthened through overcoming the ‘centralization’ of power
and authority – it can be done through promoting participatory governance
vii. Services provided by the state should be benchmarked for effective monitoring and
evaluation and for comparison with ideal standards of service delivery
viii. Social Accountability mechanisms should be integrated within state’s project and
schemes at all three – planning and design, implementation and monitoring, and
evaluation, phases
ix. Evidence base should be built through documentation of SAc experiences and their
impact evaluations in Pakistan. For this, civil society organizations working on SAc
should be encouraged to publish and share their experiences and lessons learned on
their official websites.
x. Besides building technical skills, donors’ and implementers should also focus on
building political skills of the targeted communities – better political skills will enable
the communities to engage with public officials and political leaders more effectively
to ensure provision of timely and quality public service delivery
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xi. The mechanism to engage with the communities and societies be diversified – i.e. the
donors and implementers must come out of their comfort zones to work with non-
traditional civil society groups such as trade unions, social movements, including
those of lawyers, and religious organizations to promote social accountability
xii. Social Accountability initiatives on the part of NGOs and CSOs usually target and
address entrenched values of a society; they must be given greater time to work and
show the desired impact. This demands a greater support and flexible approach on the
part of donors.
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