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Rude Accountability: Informal Pressures on Frontline Bureaucrats in Bangladesh
Authors:Naomi Hossain
Institution:is a Research Fellow at the Institute of Development Studies, University of Sussex, Falmer, Brighton BN1 9RE, UK. She researches the politics and governance of poverty and social policy, and has recently become interested in how people experience economic crises.
Abstract:This article is about ‘rude’ forms of accountability — the informal pressures used by citizens to claim public services and to sanction service failures. Rude accountability is characterized by a lack of official rules or formal basis and a reliance on the power of social norms and rules to influence and sanction official performance. The article draws on evidence from Bangladesh, a state which has not reformed its social sector governance, to explore when and why poor citizens resort to ‘rude’ accountability, whether they have a comparative advantage in the use of informal mechanisms, and whether these work, in terms of gaining better service. It asks what informal accountability mechanisms imply for governance reform in social services, and discusses lessons for other ‘unreformed’ states like Bangladesh.
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