Accountability in International Organizations : the case of World Bank Inspection Panel ( 1993-2015 )

This paper argues that the concept of social accountability can be useful to explain the transparency and accountability policies adopted by international organizations (IOs). Social accountability is understood as the contributions of civil society actors in the functioning of IOs. In international politics, the recent development of IOs' accountability mechanisms has been challenged by the absence of a world government and the impact of inter-state power relations on the decision-making process of international organizations. The presence of civil society actors can reduce the gap between international organizations and citizens affected by their activities. This article resorts to a specific case study: the World Bank Inspection Panel. The analysis revealed the role of civil society actors in the creation, operation and outcomes of this institution. This analysis shows that the concept of social accountability can be adequate to explain not only the Inspection Panel, but other mechanisms recently developed by international organizations.

Accountability in International Organizations: the case of World Bank Inspection Panel (1993-2015) (2017) 11 (1) e0002 -2/28 he current debate on the quality of democracies generated a debate on the performance of political institutions in order to ascertain to what extent they would be compatible with the management of the complex problems of the contemporary world.It is within these assessments that the concepts of transparency and accountability have become relevant.In international politics, this same debate on the quality of democracy had repercussions on the analysis of the possibilities of democratizing international organizations (IOs) 1 .Thus, the use of concepts such as transparency and accountability to assess international organizations is nothing more than transposing the broader debate on the quality of national democracies into the international sphere.
Attempts to democratize international organizations face the characteristic complexity of international politics: absence of global governance, complex interdependence, and increased levels of interaction between state and non-state actors.
Therefore, analyzing and operationalizing democratic accountability has become a complex task for these organizations (KEOHANE, 2006;NYE, 2001;WOODS and NARLIKAR, 2001).This article sustains that the concept of social accountability can be appropriate to develop empirical studies on the accountability of IOs.This concept emerged from the democratic experiences of Latin America, characterized by the weakness of traditional accountability mechanisms (such as elections and checks and balances).These experiences have shown the role of played by organized sectors of civil society seeking to exercise influence and control over those responsible for decisionmaking.These actors can activate a network of intrastate control agencies (PERUZZOTTI and , 2002, p. 02).In international politics, the weakness of existing accountability mechanisms can also be compensated for by the actions of civil society, which is manifested in the defense of collective interests and contributes to reducing the gap between IOs and the citizens of the national states, as pointed out by Robert Dahl (1994) when discussing the experience of European integration in the early 1990s.
This article argues that the notion of social accountability can be useful to understand the mechanisms of accountability adopted by international organizations, since civil society actors may indeed contribute to the functioning of IOs.In order to ___________________________________________________________________________ 1 See, in this regard, Buchanan and Keohane, 2006;Fox, 2000 and2007;Grant and Keohane, 2005;Held, 2004;Hollyer, Rosendorff and Vreeland, 2011;Keohane, 2003Keohane, , 2006Keohane, , and 2011;;Keohane and Nye, 2003;Keohane, Macedo and Moravcsik, 2009;Moravscik, 2004; among others.

Accountability in political theory
Accountability is a polysemous concept, with various meanings and uses in many areas, such as administration, economics, and politics.For the purposes of this article, it refers specifically to the use of the term in the theory and practice of the latter field.As a starting point, therefore, accountability must be defined.
A comprehensive concept, accountability is an integral part of any procedural definition of democracy (SCHMITTER, 1999), as it encompasses two articulated and fundamental elements for this regime: accountability and responsiveness of political For these constitutive elements to be operationalized, democratic societies have built a series of institutional mechanisms, which traditionally comprise two types of accountability, horizontal and vertical.Guillermo O 'Donnell's analyses (1998;2000) help in the conceptualization of these two types of accountability.
As its name suggests, horizontal accountability is constituted by the controls that agencies of the three branches of government -legislative, executive and judicialexercise on each other.Of course, the effectiveness of these controls is a function of the symmetry of power and of the relative autonomy of each of these branches in relation to the other two.Multiple mechanisms, organs and/or structures can be cited in this type, such as courts of accounts, parliamentary committees of inquiry, presidential veto, judicial power to judge the acts of other branches, and so on.In this sense, horizontal accountability takes place within government and is closely related to the checks and balances of the American pluralist tradition that dates, at least, from the 'Federalist Papers'.
Vertical accountability is exercised by the constituents over the incumbents, by the voters over the elected.Its main mechanism is, therefore, the elections.The assumption in this case is that citizens would tend to reward good political actors and punish the bad ones by voting; thus, vertical accountability involves actors both within and outside government.It is necessary to emphasize that O' Donnell (2006) classifies the media and the civil society actions focused on accountability in this type, considering them as limited in their absence of formal enforcement power -this is the reason why in this section of the article, such actions will be qualified as part of a social type of accountability.
The literature on the subject presents an expressive set of limitations in the functioning of accountability mechanisms, especially in the new polyarchies of the so- called third wave of democratization.In the case of horizontal accountability, the authoritarian tradition in which the executive historically prevails over other branches, especially at the subnational levels of government, hampers the proper operation of checks and balances (O'DONNELL, 2000;SCHMITTER, 1999).
Authors such as José María Maravall (1999) and John Ferejohn (1999) point out that effective vertical accountability in any political system is practically impossible.The combination of fiduciary mandate, information asymmetry favorable to political agents, and episodic elections entails a relatively high degree of independence of the political agent's action from the voter who ultimately nominated him.A disconnection between campaign commitments and effective action in the offices is produced, because, when pushed to the limit, the politician can argue that the circumstances in which such commitments were made change and cause changes in courses of action.Proponents of this position argue that the politician's fear of the voter is too diffuse to ensure that he has his will in fact considered, leaving him awaiting the next election.In environments marked by deficits in civic culture, this situation is aggravated.Jonathan Fox (2000), for example, uses the term reverse vertical accountability to designate the strong tendency in these societies for politicians to control voters, either by patronage or by violence.
Beyond these limits, horizontal and vertical types are insufficient to account for the performance of non-state actors in the operationalization of accountability.In view of that, Catalina Smulovitz and Enrique Peruzzotti (2000) propose the concept of social accountability, which "involves actions carried out by actors with different degrees of organization who are recognized as legitimate claimants of rights" (SMULOVITZ and PERUZZOTTI, 2000, p. 03).This is, therefore, the social control exercised outside the state sphere by actors of civil society and the media.Among the actions that comprise this type, the authors cite: the application of strategies of pressure and denunciation; the transformation of local issues into regional, national or international issues (something very close to what Elmer Schattschneider (1960) calls expansion of the scope of conflicts); and the threat of harm the reputation of political agents and organizations that act inappropriately.
One might object that actions that comprise strategies such as those listed above would not properly be accountability mechanisms, as there is no direct power of investigation, sanction and punishment.However, as the concept formulators themselves state, the main reason for the existence of these actions is precisely to Accountability in International Organizations: the case of World Bank Inspection Panel (1993-2015) (2017) 11 (1) e0002 -6/28 trigger or increase the functioning of traditional vertical and horizontal accountability mechanisms.In addition to the obvious limits of transposing the analysis of the traditional dimensions and mechanisms for the analysis of IOs according to their specificities, it is plausible to recognize the differences in social accountability, because it is built outside the traditional institutions of national states.In this sense, the article proposes that this is a valid tool to analyze to what extent international organizations are porous, that is, accountable, to the demands and pressures of civil society actors.

Accountability in international organizations
In international politics, existing accountability mechanisms operate in a context characterized by the absence of a world government, which limits the possibility of functioning of these mechanisms.For Grant and Keohane (2005) and Keohane (2006), international organizations develop actions that affect people in various parts of the world.Therefore, they must face the challenge of creating accountability mechanisms through which they can establish closer links with citizens, non-state actors and national governments affected by their decisions.
For Grant and Keohane (2005), current debates are focused on claims to improve accountability and limit abuses of power in international politics.From these debates, relevant questions have emerged, such as: 01.how should we think about international accountability when there is no global democracy?02.who should be responsible and according to what standards?(GRANT and KEOHANE, 2005, p. 29).The answer to these questions implies recognizing that there is a distinction between two models of accountability that can be identified in international politics: participation and delegation.The two models raise a third crucial question in assessing accountability mechanisms in international politics: who has the right to control the holder of power?(GRANT and KEOHANE, 2005, p. 31).In the participation model, holders of power are evaluated by those affected by their actions.In the delegation model, performance is evaluated by those who entrust power to the holders, that is, the national states (GRANT and KEOHANE, 2005, pp. 32-33).
Robert Dahl (1999, p. 19) argued that international organizations are incapable of sustaining democratic deliberation and decision and therefore cannot be democratic.
Without incorporating Dahl's skepticism, other authors have questioned the evaluation of democracy in international organizations.This is the case, for example, of Andrew  (2017) 11 (1)  e0002 -7/28 Moravcsik (2004, pp. 336-337), who raised a central issue for contemporary international politics: 'would global governance be democratically legitimate or would it suffer from a democratic deficit?'When one considers the distance between citizens and IOs, there would be, in fact, a democratic deficit (MORAVCSIK, 2004, p. 336).This is also suggested by Woods and Narlikar (2001, p. 573).For these authors, this deficit does not preclude the functioning of accountability mechanisms in international politics.In order to analyze them properly, however, it is necessary to recognize the specific conditions under which these mechanisms function in international politics.People elect politicians in the domestic sphere who form governments, which in turn appoint ministers who are members of and select delegations which will represent the states in the WTO (World Trade Organization) or in other international organizations (WOODS and NARLIKAR, (2001).Therefore, the model of delegation of power by Grant and Keohane (2005) prevails.Delegation to IOs involves the weight of states in shaping the direction of organizations, in providing key resources for their activities and in decision-making.
For David Held (2004, pp. 369-370), there is in fact a deficit of accountability related to two interrelated difficulties: on the one hand, power imbalances between Member States and, on the other hand, imbalances between states and non-state actors in the shaping and development of global public policies.Multilateral organizations need to be representative of the States involved, but they rarely are.In addition, there should be agreements to enable dialogue and consultation between the State and non-state actors.These conditions occur only partially in multilateral decision-making bodies.In IOs, there is a problem of representation that appears in international negotiations, in which developed countries are able to send a delegation with a team of negotiators and experts on negotiation issues, while developing countries can send only one representative (HELD, 2004).
This set of problems raised by Held (2004) appears in the experiences of accountability in international politics.In these experiences, the participation model proposed by Grant and Keohane (2005) is more difficult to achieve because it involves that the populations affected by the decisions of the IOs have some direct impact on these decisions.The delegation model, therefore, can work better through accountability mechanisms such as the World Bank Inspection Panel and through civil society activities at different levels (local, national, and international).Such action may partly offset the power imbalances in IOs, as Held (2004) noted above.
Accountability in International Organizations: the case of World Bank Inspection Panel (1993Panel ( -2015) ) ( 2017) 11 (1)  e0002 -8/28 Then, the concept of social accountability can be useful to think about the experiences of democratization existing in international politics.Civil society actors are pressing the horizontal control agencies to initiate investigations and to monitor the behavior of public officials.It is, therefore, an important dimension of accountability in democracies, especially in those situations where traditional mechanisms do not function properly.This is what can be observed in international politics, in which the mechanisms of accountability created by IOs have limitations.Therefore, it can be argued that the social dimension of accountability would put the IO's efforts into action to seek accountability to the publics affected by their decisions and activities.The World Bank's experience in this regard is relevant for the purposes of analysis.
Before doing so, however, it is necessary to make explicit what civil society under the terms of this article means.For Cohen and Arato (1994), the civil society is constituted as a space of autonomy of diversified actors in opposition to the coercive logic of the state and of the market.According to Cohen and Arato (1994), civil society actors seek to promote participatory and deliberative processes through which they can influence the economy and the state and develop their capacity to control both.They are involved in the defense of numerous social and environmental causes, such as the guarantee of diffuse rights (gender, ethnic, ecological, etc), the respect for indigenous peoples, the protection of the environment, and others.
Civil society groups a set of actors such as social movements, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), labor unions, varied types of civil and community associations and individuals.Civil society expresses itself, therefore, both through organized and not organized ways; it is possible to find references to these expressions in several works (GOHN, 2014;LAVALLE, CASTELLO and BICHIR, 2004;MAIA, 2006).Projects financed by the WB.These forms of action will be then examined.

Civil society in the creation and revisions of the Panel
In 1993, the position of the United States, favorable to the Bank's institutional reforms, created conditions for the success of the campaigns carried out by civil society in favor of a greater accountability of this international organization.Endowed with their own interests and autonomy before states and international organizations, civil society actors used the positive environment produced by the United States' position to make their goal of increasing the Bank's accountability.Guimarães (2012) considers that, internally, the Management's diagnosis showed that the efficiency of the organization's programs would be greater if criticisms and suggestions from the actors of the organized civil society were incorporated8 .At the same time, the more intense pressures of these actors for World Bank reforms in the 1990s led to the adoption of the strategy of incorporating civil society into the organization.The purpose of this strategy, adopted by the Bank's presidency, was not only to listen to the criticism and recommendations of the social actors, but to co-opt them to limit the losses generated by the criticisms to the organization (see PEREIRA, 2015, p. 469).The presidency of James Wolfensohn was able to accomplish this goal, as shown by the analysis of João Márcio Mendes Pereira (2011, pp. 203-204).For Pereira (2011), the need for a revision of the functions of the World Bank and the IMF (International Monetary Fund) was under discussion in the early 1990s.For the Bank's presidency, therefore, it was necessary to ensure the survival of the World Bank Group's own financial institutions amid the White House's and civil society's 'crossfire'.

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Accountability in International Organizations: the case of World Bank Inspection Panel (1993Panel ( -2015) ) (2017) 11 (1) e0002 -12/28 In addition to this general context, two specific episodes contributed to explaining the origins of the Inspection Panel.The first was the Wapenhans Report (submitted to the Executive Board in November 1992), which revealed, among other things, that 37% of Bank-financed projects were unsatisfactory (UDALL, 1998, p. 401).
The  , 2001, pp. 412-413).This plan also recommended the Bank's need to adopt a reliable independent judgment mechanism on specific operations -such as an inspection panel -as they could  This proposal envisioned the creation of a permanent three-member body to conduct the investigations of the requesters, with an independent budget for its activities and for providing the conditions so the team could travel to the places where the investigations would be carried out (CLARK, 2003, p. 07).The Inspection Panel was created at the same time that the US Congress approved the replenishment of IDA, with the proviso of continuing to follow the results of the Bank-approved reforms.
The pressure from NGOs was made effective by IDA's reliance on replenishment.IDA has three sources of funding, according to João Márcio Mendes Pereira (2011, p. 185)9 : voluntary donations from richer member countries, repayment of credits provided to borrowers and transferences from IBRD and IFC.Voluntary donations from countries such as the United States are IDA's main source of funds.
These donations are made every three years through negotiated replenishments among 30 donor countries.The United States, the main donor, approves its contribution to IDA annually.Therefore, the US Congress was used as an important space for pressure from Washington-based NGOs.
It is also possible to identify the performance of civil society in the Inspection Panel revisions 10 .The first revision was made in 1996 and was already foreseen in the Panel's Rules of Procedure.NGOs and academics were able to send suggestions, including the possibility for international and local NGOs to submit requests for inspection, even if they were not representing rights or interests of affected people.
Requests for inspection would be made in the name of the general interest.This suggestion was not accepted by the Management.The main revision carried out in 1996 was related to the Panel's ability to conduct a preliminary assessment of the alleged harm in the inspection request to ascertain whether there has been a violation of the Bank's policies and whether a full investigation would be required.SCHLEMMER, 2001, pp. 416-417).This revision strengthened the Panel by making it responsible for recommending or not the initiation of full and detailed investigations.
In short, civil society actors played an important role in the Panel's creation and, particularly, in its second revision in 1999.They contributed to strengthening the role of the Panel in 1999 and to sustaining the need for full investigations whose purpose would be to reveal problems of compliance.In the next section, how civil society operates in the functioning of the Panel is examined.

Civil society in the functioning of the Inspection Panel
The Inspection Panel is seen as a mechanism to give voice to local communities and to citizens located, especially, in developing countries, affected by environmental and social impacts generated by the Bank-financed projects (BARLAS and TASSONI, 2015;BARROS, 2001;BUNTAINE, 2015;CLARK, 2003;EBRAHIM and HERZ, 2007;LUKAS, 2015;NIELSON and TIERNEY, 2003;WONG and MAYER, 2015).
Nevertheless, the lack of information from the local population and the technical nature of the process lead the requesters to seek the assistance of experts, such as lawyers, and even specialists from civil society (TREAKLE, FOX and CLARK, 2003, p. 266,.The drafting of a request is not a simple task, since it requires determining whether there has been a violation of the Bank policies.To do this, one needs to understand what  2015).In addition to the efforts of the Panel itself, civil society actors seek to make this mechanism and its operation more accessible to affected people by helping to make it known and, at the same time by: 01.assisting in the elaboration of the request; 02.It is also important to note that most requests, formulated with the participation of civil society organizations, involve local actors and grassroots movements.Table 02 below summarizes the information on the types of requesters.With regard to the admissibility of requests, it can be seen on Graph 02 that 59 cases (or 57% of the total) were admitted by the Panel or generated revisions by the Bank's Management.The remaining requests were not registered or admitted for investigation (44 cases or 43% of the total).Admissibility is understood here as: 01.cases that have generated detailed investigation by Panel members; and 02.requests that led the Bank to propose revisions to the projects before authorizing full investigations.The practice of proposing action plans prior to the investigation was more frequent prior to the Panel's second revision, but was only completely removed by the Bank's Management after 1999.These requests could be included among the admitted cases, as the Management acknowledged the need for: 01.proposing revisions in the projects prior to the full investigation; or 02.canceling funding for compliance problems (as in case 01, for example).This datum shows how civil society acted with the purpose of contributing to force the Bank to investigate or adopt revisions in the projects.It also reveals how the Bank proved to be permeable to requesters.Graph 02 summarizes data on the admissibility of requests.
Regarding the results obtained by the requesters, it is possible to note that, in Source: World Bank data (2015a) and Wong and Mayer (2015).
Most requests come from developing countries, located in Asia, Africa and Latin America.The political regimes of these countries are varied.In order to assess the national conditions in which requests are made, it is possible to use the Democracy We also observed the extent to which political regimes interfere with the role of civil society in the formulation of requests.Graph 05, then, displays information on the intersection between political regimes and the type of request.Only cases in which the political regime could be classified were considered (98).The only case issued by a company was excluded because the objective was to evaluate the association between the political regime and the performance of civil society in the formulation of requests (N = 97).As can be seen in Graph 05 above, actors from the so-called organized civil society (such as NGOs and civil and community associations) predominate in cases coming from undemocratic countries.Requests made by individuals or groups of individuals prevail in democratic countries.These data reveal that organized civil society is more active in contexts of authoritarianism, in which the local population is afraid to make requests.Authoritarian contexts can affect the type of requester as individuals fear reprisals from governments and companies operating in their country.This is the case, for example, with a request for inspection by an international NGO representing the local population of China (TREAKE, FOX and CLARK, 2003, p. 251).In order to avoid retaliation, people affected by the projects ask for their anonymity in the majority of cases or prefer the petition to be presented on their behalf by organized civil society actors.This datum shows that organized civil society contributes to monitor Bank-financed projects, especially in authoritarian contexts, where organized civil society acts with less risk of retaliation.
The information and data presented above show how civil society actions (2017) 11 (1) e0002 -21/28 Inspection Panel, examining the content of each action plan, corrective action and revision, but to note that to some extent, the Inspection Panel has generated action plans, corrective measures and revisions with the participation of civil society.This reveals that the Panel worked, to some extent, within the limits imposed to a horizontal accountability mechanism of an international organization.Among these limits, it is necessary to consider: 01. the gap between the World Bank and citizens affected by projects funded by this organization; and 02. the imbalances in the distribution of power of international politics that generate reflexes on the decision-making process of the IOs and, consequently, interfere in the functioning of the mechanisms of accountability of these organizations.
The gap between the Bank and national citizens tends to generate the accountability deficit pointed out by David Held (2004).This deficit is partly offset by actions by civil society capable of establishing mediations between the citizens, the Bank, the Member States and those responsible for the decision-making of that organization.These mediations can be observed: 01. in the activities of international NGOs in Washington; and 02. in the requests submitted to the Inspection Panel, in which civil society was present, as can be seen from the data presented above.For Brown and Fox (1998b, p. 529), the pressure exerted by civil society actors can deliver results in accordance with their ability to overcome the resistance imposed by the Executive Board, which has fundamental decision-making capacity and represents national governments.The World Bank, like other IOs, tends to be accountable to the Member States, as noted by Woods and Narlikar (2001, pp. 572-573).Civil society seeks, however, to influence the behavior of States and make them sensitive to the demands of greater accountability.Of course, the results of the action of civil society depend on existing political regimes.However, even in countries governed by authoritarian regimes it is possible to identify the presence of social actors in the formulation of requests to the Panel, as was shown in Graph 05.Civil society's role in monitoring is essential to inform states about the performance of IOs and to keep them more accountable for their actions.In this way, the most powerful states will have the elements to impose sanctions on organizations (such as suspending on lending) and to ensure that the actions they take fail to produce negative social and environmental impacts (BUNTAINE, 2015, p. 100).Considering the three lines of action listed above, studies on accountability in international politics cannot disregard the role of civil society in the functioning of accountability mechanisms of international organizations.In these studies, the concept of social accountability is adequate to the development of empirical studies.

Final considerations
The concept of social accountability was designed to examine accountability, especially in those democratic experiences where traditional accountability mechanisms fail or prove to be insufficient.This is what O 'Donnell (1998, p. 28) observed when examining the countries which, according to him, had 'weak or intermittent' horizontal accountability.To a certain extent, international politics is similar to the reality of democracies in these countries (part of them located in Latin America).The democratic experiences of these countries allow us to assess the problems and limits of accountability in international politics.For Dahl (1994Dahl ( , 1999)), democracy is unlikely present at the international level.His 'skepticism' was expressed in his 1994 article when he examined the supranational political institutions of the European integration process, stating, in a nutshell, that there is no possibility of democracy outside nationstates.The authors of the concept of social accountability presented an alternative to the functioning of accountability in the democracies of Latin America by highlighting the role of civil society and the media in the operation of accountability mechanisms.It is plausible to transpose this analysis to international politics for two main reasons, among others: 01. because of the significant expansion of social actors in international politics, which seek to increase their influence in various themes and in various power spaces, such as IOs (NYE and KEOHANE, 1971;MERLE, 1981).They are actors with their own interests and resources that seek to influence the decision-making processes in national states and IOs; 02. because of the possibility of these actors to contribute to attenuate (but not eliminate) the democratic deficit (MORAVSCIK, 2004) of international politics, considering the practical difficulties to operationalize accountability.
In concrete terms, the experience of the Inspection Panel has shown that social actors contribute to the functioning of one of the main mechanisms of accountability of IOs.This experience shows the possibility of transposing to international politics the argument used by Peruzzotti andSmulovitz (2002, 2006) to highlight the importance of social accountability.In other words, Peruzzotti and Smulovitz (2006) and O 'Donnell (2006) consider the social dimension articulated with the horizontal dimension of accountability, as the actions of civil society actors can put into operation horizontal accountability agencies.This was observed in the experience of the Inspection Panel, in which civil society actors contribute to compensate for the limitations of the WB's horizontal accountability mechanisms by monitoring the behavior of states and the Bank itself.For the above reasons, it is pertinent to think of the use of the concept of Peruzzotti andSmulovitz (2002, 2006) to analyze other mechanisms of horizontal accountability, created and maintained by international organizations.
In summary, this article started from the recognition of the theoretical difficulties to operationalize the accountability in international organizations and to interpret it analytically.It also defended the use of the concept of social accountability for the development of new empirical studies.It would be pertinent, then, to examine other mechanisms of accountability of international organizations to identify the modalities of civil society performance in each of them.Studying these modalities can provide clues to qualify the participation of civil society in these mechanisms.This task may inspire future research based on the concept of social accountability applied to the study of attempts at democratization of international organizations.
Translated by Cabo Verde Submitted on July 30, 2015 Accepted on October 22, 2016 , the article will resort to a specific case study capable of revealing how social accountability works in practice and its challenges.The study examines the World Bank Inspection Panel, established in 1993, and used by two of the five World Bank Group institutions: IBRD (International Bank for Reconstruction and Development) and the International Development Association (IDA) 2 .The study departs from the literature on accountability in political theory and international politics and examines the World Bank's Panel and documents and reports produced by this organization.The purpose is to identify how civil society actors behaved in the creation, operation and results of the Inspection Panel from 1993 to 2015, so as to demonstrate the adequacy of the concept of social accountability and its application in international politics.The article is divided into five main sections, in addition to the introduction and the final considerations.The first presents the concepts of accountability in political theory.The second questions the use of concepts in the analysis of international organizations.The third describes the World Bank Inspection Panel.The fourth identifies the civil society contributions to the creation as well as 1996 and 1999 revisions of the Inspection Panel.The fifth identifies the presence of civil society actors as requesters of inspection requests and argues that the concept of social accountability has become instrumental in interpreting the Inspection Panel and other accountability mechanisms developed by international organizations.
___________________________________________________________________________2 The reference to the World Bank in the course of the article refers to two of the five institutions of the World Bank Group: IBRD (International Bank for Reconstruction and Development) and IDA (International Development Association).The other three institutions of the World Bank Group are: the International Finance Corporation (IFC); the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA); and the International Center for Settlement of Investment Disputes.When the purpose is to name the five institutions, the term World Bank Group will be used.case ofWorld Bank Inspection Panel (1993-2015)    first is directly related to the availability of information about the acts practiced by the agents that operate in the state sphere.It is related, therefore, to the instruments of greater or lesser transparency of government.Responsiveness, in turn, means that the preferences of the constituents are effectively considered in the work of those who hold positions in the state bureaucracy.Accountable agencies, institutions and governments are therefore transparent and responsive to society and citizens.In this sense, the discussion about accountability answers an essential question: who controls the controller?
Civil society's subjects can articulate themselves through local grassroots actions, forming networks of local, national and international actors around common themes (issue networks) and are mobilized around different causes and objectives.In the experience of the Inspection Panel, civil society actors with the characteristics described above predominate.In spite of the importance of other connections between the World Bank and private foundations -such as the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the Ford and Rockefeller Foundations --, these connections will not be explored in this article, considering that the nature and interests of these foundations do not fit the profile of the actors that use the Inspection Panel.Philanthropic foundations, such as the Bill & Melinda Gates, Alexsandro Eugenio Pereira, Rodrigo Rossi Horochovski, Mariana Mattos de Almeida Cruz & Noeli Rodrigues(2017) 11 (1)e0002 -9/28 establish another type of relationship with the Bank, involving donations to social projects, according to the analysis of João Márcio MendesPereira (2014, pp.79-81)  3 .In the following sections, the Inspection Panel will be examined, taking into account the theoretical issues raised in these first two sections of the article.A brief description of the Inspection PanelThis section aims at describing and presenting the Inspection Panel, which was established in 1993.In its original proposal, the Panel became one of the most advanced accountability mechanisms developed by an international institution 4 (WOODS and NARLIKAR, 2001, p. 576).The Executive Board 5 created the Panel to be an independent vehicle for projects funded by the International Development Association (IDA) or the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD) to be subject of inspection requests capable of showing that the harm is the result of procedural failures and of the application of the policies of these two financial institutions.The application can be filed in any language, by a civil society actor, by a representative of the affected people, and even by one of the Bank's Executive Officers.In organizational terms, the Panel consists of three members of different nationalities appointed by the President of the Bank after consulting the Board of Executive Directors.They are appointed for a five-year term by the Board.The Panel's Establishment Resolution 6 settled the need to: 01.Appoint a staff member to be the Executive Secretary; 02. have sufficient budgetary resources to carry out the activities of ___________________________________________________________________________ case of World Bank Inspection Panel (1993-2015) (2017) 11 (1) e0002 -10/28 the Panel.The Secretariat provides operational and administrative support and assists Panel members in the processing of requests for inspection, in the investigations and in the enquiries made by the requesters.The Secretariat is responsible for: 01.organizing and participating in advocacy activities, such as political discussions, conferences and information workshops; 02.disseminating information related to the Panel and its activities through publications and in the media; providing general research and logistical support to Panel members (WORLD BANK, 2015b, p.15).To be registered, an inspection request must meet the following eligibility criteria: 01.requesters must prove that they live in areas affected by IBRD or IDA Projects or Programs or that they represent affected persons; 02.requesters must allege that there has been social or environmental harm generated by the projects or that they may occur in the future; 03.requesters need to show that the harm generated was due to the violation, by the Bank, of its policies and procedures 7 .Requesters do not need to detail the policies violated by the Bank.The Panel will identify those policies if the request meets the eligibility criteria; 04.requesters must finally demonstrate that they have attempted to present their requests to the Bank Management and have not received satisfactory responses (WORLD BANK, 2003, p. 07).In addition to these elements, the request cannot be formulated for a loan that is no longer active.The loan must have less than 95% of the amounts disbursed.Upon receipt of an inspection request, the Panel forwards it to the World Bank Management requesting a response to the requesters.The Management has 21 days to submit a response, and then the Panel makes a review, also within 21 days, in which determines the eligibility of both the requesters and the inspection request.The Panel then submits its Eligibility Report and the recommendation on the investigation to the Board of Executive Directors for approval.If the Board of Executive Directors approves the investigation, the request is admitted and the Panel initiates a full investigation with no time limit.After the Report is submitted by the Panel, the Management has six weeks to present to the Board its recommendations on the subject matter of investigation.It is the responsibility of the Board of Executive Directors to make the final decision on what should be done based on the results of the full investigation and on the Bank Management's recommendations (WORLD BANK, 2009, pp.217-218).___________________________________________________________________________ 7 On the Bank's safeguard policies, see Bank World, 2012a.two sections, the role of civil society actors in the creation, operation and results of the Inspection Panel over the past 22 years is identified.There are at least two forms of civil society involvement in the Inspection Panel: 01. in the establishment of the Inspection Panel and in its 1996 and 1999 revisions, when advocated against revisions that sought to reduce the Panel's functions; 02. in the functioning of the Panel, particularly at local and national levels, contributing to the formulation of requests for inspection and seeking to influence the Bank's adoption of action plans and/or corrective measures to mitigate the negative social and environmental impacts of lead to implementation problems(SCHULTE-SCHLEMMER, 2001, p. 413).The second episode refers to the investigations on the Narmada project (Sardar Sarovar Dam and Power Project), in West India.The civil society campaign around this project contributed to the creation of the Morse Commission, which strongly criticized the Bank's performance in the areas of environment and resettlement of populations displaced by the construction of energy projects(UDALL, 1998, p. 394).For LoriUdall   (1998, p. 394), the Narmada project was the catalyst for the creation of the Inspection Panel.In addition, the report revealed the Bank's difficulties in involving local communities in the process of economic development and in hearing their requests(UDALL, 1998).As the Bank did not pay attention to the conclusions of the Report and did not suspend the transfer of funding to the project, the mobilization of NGOs based in Washington played an important role, as they articulated some initiatives within the US Congress to demand greater accountability from the Bank.To this end, they had the support of American Congressman Barney Frank (Democratic Party), chair of the Subcommittee on Development, Finance, Trade and Monetary Policy, and of Sydney Key (Academic), who ran the staff of this Subcommittee.Both were particularly receptive to the model of an Inspection Panel submitted by two Washington-based NGOs: the 'Environmental Defense Fund' and the 'Center for International Environmental Law'.
The second revision was carried out in 1999 based on the efforts of a working group set up by the Bank's Executive Board.This group was supposed to present a proposal without the participation of actors outside the Bank, such as NGOs.Criticism of this methodology led the Executive Board to invite academics and NGO representatives to comment on the proposal and to participate in an open discussion with members of the Board(SCHULTE-SCHLEMMER, 2001, pp.416-417).In this way, civil society was Accountability in International Organizations: the case of World Bank Inspection Panel (1993-2015) (2017) 11 (1) e0002 -14/28 given space to follow the Panel revision process, presenting proposals that would be approved by the Executive Board.The most important one, passed in 1999, established that if the Panel recommended an investigation, the Board should authorize the initiation of such an investigation, unless the request for inspection would not meet the eligibility criteria.This amendment addressed the interests of civil society, which recommended the need for full Panel investigations that would serve as a basis for the Management to present an Action Plan.The Board should therefore rely on the Panel's recommendations, which would define the admissibility of requests (SCHULTE- they are and how to contact the Inspection Panel.The problem of the lack of knowledge about the existence of this mechanism of accountability and how to use it is also pointed out in the World Bank documents (WORLD BANK, 2009; WORLD BANK/CAO/MIGA/IFC, liaising with Panel members who will conduct on-site investigations; 03.facilitating the transparency of the Panel through pressure to disseminate the documents and the results of the investigations; 04.exercising wide publicity and campaign in the media to denounce the Bank's failures and demanding measures to repair the environmental and social harm generated by the projects.Civil society actors thus contribute to the functioning of the Bank's main horizontal accountability mechanism 11 .Data on participation and direct involvement of civil society in the Inspection Panel are revealing of the role of these actors, particularly NGOs, civil and community associations and individuals.According to data from the Panel's website 12 , from 1994 (year in which the first request for inspection was made) to June 2015, the Panel received 103 requests for inspection (see WORLD BANK, PanelCases, 2015a).For the purpose of identifying the presence of civil society in these requests, all cases available on the Panel's website will be considered until June 2015, when the period for the Panel's annual report (from July 2014 to June 2015) was closed (seeWORLD BANK, 2015b).Some requests refer to the same project.This is the case of projects in Panama, India, Albania, Argentina and Brazil, which received two inspection requests.The same project in India received three requests.The Panel treats each separately.For this reason, the authors have chosen to consider them individually.Data for the 103 cases were tabulated in a database whose construction was guided by a set of variables, described in Table01below.From this set of variables, crosses and analyses were performed in addition to the descriptive statistics, which were corroborated by the argument of this article.Graph 01 below shows the evolution of the number of inspection requests submitted per year (N = 103).There is a slight increase in the number of requests in the period 2009 to 2015.Data show an average of 7.2 requests per year for this particular period in contrast to the overall Panel average of 4.6.However, the number of cases presents a very uneven distribution throughout the period considered in this research(1994(  to June 2015)).___________________________________________________________________________Accountabilityin International Organizations: the case ofWorld Bank Inspection Panel (1993-2015) requests considered here, 102 were submitted by civil society actors (requesters).These actors include: 01.local and national NGOs; 02.civil and community associations; and 03.individuals, such as local residents and representatives of the interests of the populations affected by the projects.One case was filed by a private company and was rejected by the Panel.For the purposes of this analysis, we classified actors in three main types: 01.company; 02.individuals; 03.civil society organizations.
52% of the 103 cases, the World Bank accepted to adopt action plans and/or corrective measures.Graph 03 summarizes this information.Among these measures, some examples can be cited: 01.improvement of consultation processes with local communities; 02.implementation of new programs and resources to benefit or compensate affected persons; 03.monitoring of social and environmental impacts; among others.As it might be expected, requests recently made are still under consideration by the Panel.Graph 03.World Bank's Inspection Panel requests according to stage (%) contributed to the operation (formulation of requests) and the results achieved by the Panel (initiation of investigation, adoption of action plans and/or corrective measures).These actions sought, among other objectives, to prevent the Panel from discharging its main investigative functions, collecting data and presenting recommendations for correcting Bank failures.The contributions of civil society have achieved mixed results.This article did not attempt to qualitatively evaluate the results achieved by the has three lines of action: 01. it exerts pressure on the decision-making process of the IOs to create and maintain accountability mechanisms; 02. it pressures national states, especially the most powerful, to lead them to recognize and validate such mechanisms.This is what occurred in the Inspection Panel's creation and revisions, as shown in this article; finally, 03.civil society pressures the national governments of countries where there are Bank-financed projects and whose undesirable social and environmental impacts, when occur, need to be reported.Civil society actors contribute to the functioning of the Panel, seeking to influence the behavior of the Bank and take it to the adoption of revisions in the projects with the purpose of minimizing negative social and environmental impacts.

Table 01 .
Research variables Variable Description/Operationalization Case Case number / order of presentation of the inspection request.Year Year of the inspection request.Country Country / countries of the project financed by the World Bank.Regime Political regime of the country according to classification of the Index of Democracy (The Economist).The original classification of four types was reduced to a binary categorization: Graph 01.World Bank's Inspection Panel requests, by year Source: World Bank data (2015a).

Table 02 .
World Bank's Inspection Panel requests, by type of requester Index 2015 of 'The Economist', which classified countries according to four types of political regimes, namely: 01.Full democracy; 02.Flawed democracy; 03.Hybrid regime; 04.Authoritarian.We decided to reduce this classification to a binary categorization: 01.
Graph 05.WB' Inspection Panel.Civil society requester type vs political regime