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Working Paper

BASIC Research Working Paper 39

Reframing the Accountability of Social Assistance in Crises: Emerging Evidence and Promising Practices

Published on 18 June 2025

This review examines shifts and emerging trends in the accountability of social assistance during crises, based on findings from the previous 2022 review. It draws on primary research from the Better Assistance in Crises (BASIC) Research programme, including themes such as targeting, aid recipients’ lived experiences and digital risks, alongside the broader literature on accountability in crises.

The paper addresses three critical accountability issues: disconnected, technocratic mechanisms; limited participation and trust between communities and aid providers; and conflicting accountability priorities. It explores how power dynamics, stakeholder participation and trust influence accountability, reviewing challenges in feedback mechanisms, donor approaches and the risk of aid diversion. The paper concludes with promising practices and identifies gaps for future research.

Cite this publication

Seferis, L. and Harvey, P. (2025) Reframing the Accountability of Social Assistance in Crises: Emerging Evidence and Promising Practices, BASIC Research Working Paper 39, Brighton: Institute of Development Studies, DOI: 10.19088/BASIC.2025.008

Authors

Independent Researcher, BASIC

Partner, Humanitarian Outcomes

Publication details

doi
10.19088/BASIC.2025.008
language
English

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