Pathologies of Accountability: ICANN and the Challenge of “Multiple Accountabilities Disorder” 论文

2005Public Administration Review引用 796
E-Government and Public ServicesPublic Policy and Administration ResearchInternet Traffic Analysis and Secure E-voting

详细信息

发表期刊/会议
Public Administration Review
发表日期
2005-01-01
发表年份
2005

关键词

E-Government and Public ServicesPublic Policy and Administration ResearchInternet Traffic Analysis and Secure E-voting

摘要

Accountability is a core concept of public administration, yet disagreement about its meaning is masked by consensus on its importance and desirability. This article proposes a five-part typology of accountability conceptions. Transparency, liability, controllability, responsibility, and responsiveness are defined as distinct dimensions of accountability, providing an improvement on the current state of conceptual fuzziness. The typology provides a vocabulary for the core argument: that conflicting expectations borne of disparate conceptions of accountability undermine organizational effectiveness. This phenomenon—labeled multiple accountabilities disorder—is illustrated with a case study. ICANN, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, is a nascent organization charged with administering the Domain Name System, the Internet's address directory. In its four-year history, ICANN has been the object of much criticism. Conflicting accountability expectations have been a source of difficulty for ICANN's leaders as they have steered the organization through its early years.

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