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How to do social accountability during distancing and lockdowns?

Innovations and new digital solutions are being developed on all continents. Some relate to accountability and to strengthening civil society’s ability to collaborate and monitor government actions.
7 May 2020
 Medical staff wearing protective face mask at Roopnagar village during first day of curfew imposed in 28 village after COVID-19 case in Beawar.
Photo:
Sumit Saraswat
COPYRIGHTED

Who would have thought at the start of 2020 we would be faced with a challenge of such proportions that normal life around the world would come to a halt? As if civil society didn’t have enough problems in 2019, what with the global rise in populism, shrinking space to act, and challenges to fundamental freedoms in many parts of the world. Then 2020 threw the curveball of the Coronavirus pandemic.

For us at U4, whose stock-in-trade is corruption, alarm bells started to ring as the scale of the crisis became apparent and donors began scrambling to channel funding to prevent a massive health crisis in developing countries. More opportunities for corruption, we thought!

For me, whose main area of research is how people can hold power accountable, I was struggling with the dilemma of how to do this when people can’t even meet? I was aware of the trend and buzz that has existed for many years around the use of technology. But I was also aware of its drawbacks. Fortunately, I was planning to work with a colleague, Per Aarvik, on a paper looking at digital agricultural subsidies and youth digital engagement. We shelved that and started thinking about the problem at hand: How to do social accountability during the time of distancing and lockdowns?

‘Innovations and new digital solutions can be used to strengthen civil society’s ability to collaborate and monitor government actions’

Digital tools and online collaboration have existed for more than a decade. Now, as the whole world is affected by the pandemic, people are finding ways to connect, co-exist, and collaborate via digital tools. People acting to minimise the effects of Covid-19 are also following this trend. This has led to a boost in civic engagement and innovations to address the various issues of the crisis. So what of civil society’s role in accountability?

In our paper Supporting civil society during the Covid-19 pandemic. The potentials of online collaborations for social accountability, we explore a few of these issues and show examples that could lead to people’s ongoing involvement in accountability. In a personal example, an old school friend who works for a UK-based community outreach charity asked on his Facebook feed for pro-bono help for the charity website from web designers who had been furloughed. By the end of the day, he had more than 20 offers. This may be anecdotal, but it’s indicative of what is happening all over the world. People under lockdown are collaborating, offering help, and sharing information and skills via online platforms.

Civil society, NGOs and companies alike are engaged in a learning process to overcome physical absence and maintain their missions (businesses). In addition, the pandemic has introduced many new challenges. To address these problems, innovations and new digital solutions are being developed on all continents. Some relate to accountability and to strengthening civil society’s ability to collaborate and monitor government actions. Hopefully, the best solutions will stay and support work for empowerment, transparency and accountability well into the future.

‘Civil society can harness both the digital tools and the opportunities for engagement the crisis has produced’

We explore how civil society can harness both the digital tools and the opportunities for engagement the crisis has produced. We highlight the challenges, limitations, and potential of using digital tools. We also offer recommendations on how civil society can be supported to make the most of these tools for social accountability and to mitigate the negative effects of corruption.

Read the full paper.

    About the author

    Saul Mullard

    Saul Mullard is a senior adviser at the U4 Anti-Corruption Resource Centre and a civil society specialist with a background in historical sociology, development studies, and South Asian studies. His research interests include the relationship between corruption and climate change and the role of local communities and indigenous peoples in addressing corruption and environmental protection. Mullard holds a doctorate and master’s in South and Inner Asian Studies from the University of Oxford, as well as a BA in Development Studies from the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) in London.

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    This work is licenced under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International licence (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)

    Photo


    Photo:
    Sumit Saraswat
    COPYRIGHTED