Social development monitoring: A process to ensure accountability

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Date

2006-12

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Prashasnika A Journal of Administrative Processes

Abstract

What does it mean to monitor development processes, and who holds the power to do so? In this paper, Anju Dwivedi situates social development monitoring within the broader shift toward people centred development that emerged in the 1990s, where participation became central to planning and implementation. Instead of viewing monitoring as a technical exercise carried out by experts, the paper argues for a process rooted in community participation, where citizens continuously observe, question, and engage with development interventions. Social development monitoring is presented as a means of strengthening accountability and governance by creating spaces for those historically excluded to articulate concerns, influence decisions, and exercise control over resources. The process moves beyond an instrumental function of tracking outcomes, and instead operates as a political act that redistributes power and challenges hierarchical decision making structures. By involving communities in identifying issues, generating information, and taking collective action, monitoring becomes a site of learning and citizenship in practice. The paper ultimately positions social development monitoring as a process that not only ensures accountability but also enables communities to shape development pathways in ways that reflect their own priorities, knowledge, and autonomy.

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Keywords

Community-Based Participatory Research, Participatory Action Research, SDG 4: Quality Education, Global

Citation

Dwivedi, A. (July-December, 2006). Social Development Monitoring: A Process to Ensure Accountability. Prashasnika A Journal of Administrative Processes Vol. XXXIII No. 2, 1-14.

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