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Perspectives on Accountability at International Financial Institutions -

Perspectives on Accountability at International Financial Institutions

Thirty Years after Creation of the World Bank Inspection Panel
Buch | Hardcover
436 Seiten
2025
Martinus Nijhoff (Verlag)
978-90-04-68757-8 (ISBN)
CHF 299,55 inkl. MwSt
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This collection of essays provides diverse perspectives on the promise, challenges, effectiveness, and future of the World Bank Inspection Panel and similar citizen-driven accountability mechanisms at other international financial and development institutions.
This collection of essays provides diverse perspectives on the promise, challenges, effectiveness, and future of the World Bank Inspection Panel and similar independent accountability mechanisms (IAMs) found at many multilateral development banks, bilateral financial institutions, United Nations agencies. These IAMs provide local communities the opportunity to defend their human rights and protect their environment when threatened by internationally financed development decisions. Contributing their perspectives are current and past IAM members and staff, top World Bank lawyers, civil society advocates, and leading academics who have studied the mechanisms since their very beginning.

Daniel D. Bradlow is a Professor and Senior Research Fellow at the Centre for Advancement of Scholarship, University of Pretoria; Professor Emeritus, American University Washington College of Law; and Compliance Officer, Social and Environmental Compliance Unit of the United Nations Development Programme. He has published widely on accountability and international organizations. David B. Hunter is a Professor Emeritus of international law at American University Washington College of Law. His research is focused on international accountability for environmental and social harm. He is co-author of International Environmental Law & Policy (5th ed.). Nicholas Paul is an editor and writer with a background in business communications, journalism, and international development organizations. His work primarily focuses on business development, corporate social responsibility, and sustainability. Varsha Iyengar Ramaswamy is a human rights and sustainability lawyer specializing in dispute resolution and impact-based human rights litigation. She currently works on business and human rights issues. She is pursuing her Doctorate in Juridical Sciences at American University Washington College of Law.

Acknowledgements

List of Figures and Tables

Abbreviations

Notes on Contributors



Introduction

 Daniel Bradlow, David Hunter, Varsha Inamyar, and Nick Paul



part 1: Reflections on Accountability



Introduction to Part 1: Conceptual Frameworks



1 Rethinking “What Counts” as Accountability

 Jonathan Fox



2 Are the MDB s Accountable? Reflecting on the Independent Accountability Mechanisms of the Multilateral Development Banks

 Susan Park



3 The Critical Contribution of Independent Accountability Mechanisms (IAM s) to the Global Governance Paradigm

 Owen McIntyre



4 The Inspection Panel and International Law

 Daniel D. Bradlow



part 2: Perspectives on the Inspection Panel Experience



Introduction to Part 2: The Panel Experience



5 The Inspection Panel Early Years: (An inside Story)

 Eduardo G. Abbott



6 People-Centered Accountability in International Development: Key Developments at the World Bank Inspection Panel (2014–2023)

 Dilek Barlas



7 Reflections on the Role of the Inspection Panel: View from a Former Chief Counsel

 Charles Di Leva



8 Reflections on the Launch of the Inspection Panel and People-Centered Accountability

 David Hunter



9 The Inspection Panel’s Thirty Years of Impact: What the Data Tell Us

 Ramanie Kunanayagam, Mark Goldsmith, Ibrahim James Pam, Serge Selwan, Richard Wyness, Ayako Kubodera, Camila Jorge do Amarel, and Rupes Dalai



part 3: Operational Issues



Introduction to Part 3: Operational Issues



10 Three Decades of Seeking Elusive Remedies

 Richard E. Bissell



11 Exiting the Disaster, Evading the Responsibility? Wadi al-Qamar – The Moon Valley

 Suzan Nada



12 World Bank Forcible Resettlement: The Need for More Inspection Panel Scrutiny

 Lori Udall



13 The World Bank, the Inspection Panel and Immunity

 Joe Athialy



14 Ending Violence in Development Finance: Actions to Affirmatively Prevent and Stop Reprisals against Rights Defenders

 Greg Berry



15 Collaborative Dispute Resolution: Five Essential Questions

 Scott Adams and Aparna Mukerjee



16 The Promise of Joint Fact Finding in Enhancing IAM Effectiveness

 Gina Barbieri



part 4: Critiques of IAM s



Introduction to Part 4: Critiques of IAM s



17 The World Bank’s Roadmap and Human Rights Responsibilities

 Juan Pablo Bohoslavsky and C.P. Chandrasekhar



18 “Use and Improve” Is My Accountability Mantra, despite Thirty Years of Eye-Opening Disappointments

 Natalie Bridgeman Fields



19 Between Disruption and Legitimation of Development

A Critical Perspective on the Inspection Panel and a Call for More Radical Thinking within the Accountability Community

 Dustin Schäfer



20 Should Decisions of Independent Accountability Mechanisms be Binding?

 Lalanath de Silva and Giada Giacomini



part 5: Next Steps on Accountability



Introduction to Part 5: Next Steps on Accountability



21 Strengthening Accountability in Challenging Times: Insights from the General Counsel of the World Bank Group

 Christopher H. Stephens



22 IMF Human Rights Accountability: A Pragmatic Way to Break the Deadlock

 Aldo Caliari



23 Ending Thirty Years of IMF Exceptionalism: A Call for an Accountability Mechanism at the International Monetary Fund

 Luiz Vieira



24 An Increased Normalization of IAM s Faces Ground Realities: Lack of Transparency Impedes Access to IAM s

 Hamid Sharif   



25 The River of Accountability Mechanisms: Then and Now

 Suresh Nanwani



26 A Proposal for One “Super” Independent Accountability Mechanism

 Daniel D. Bradlow



part 6: Conclusion



Conclusion

 Daniel Bradlow, David Hunter, Nick Paul, and Varsha Iyengar



Index

Erscheinungsdatum
Sprache englisch
Maße 155 x 235 mm
Gewicht 851 g
Themenwelt Recht / Steuern EU / Internationales Recht
Recht / Steuern Öffentliches Recht Völkerrecht
ISBN-10 90-04-68757-2 / 9004687572
ISBN-13 978-90-04-68757-8 / 9789004687578
Zustand Neuware
Informationen gemäß Produktsicherheitsverordnung (GPSR)
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