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GAO, Government Accountability Office, Government Accountability Office Building, US Government Accountability Office, Washington DC, Washington, District of Columbia, United States

Accountability CMS Woodrow Pimentel Pantoja

Accountability CMS Woodrow Pimentel Pantoja

Achieve greater success and results with BYLD Group's accountability solutions. We understand the importance of holding oneself and others responsible for commitments and outcomes. Our comprehensive programs empower individuals and teams to embrace a culture of accountability, fostering trust, transparency, and high-performance. Through expert guidance and proven methodologies, we equip you with the tools to set clear goals, track progress, and take ownership of your actions. Transform your organization with BYLD Group's accountability solutions and unlock your full potential. To know more, please visit byldgroup.com/cruciallifechangingskills/crucial-conversat...

Setting up for the FACE Accountability Assembly

Silent Bob, is that you?

Going to School is a Nonprofit organisation that firmly believes in accountability and transparency in its operations. We have been awarded as one of the most transparent charities by Guidestar India.

A delegation of former Aboke Girls present a statement in the ICC Review Conference People's Space (June 2010).

 

Copyright © 2010 Justice and Reconciliation Project

Accountability CMS Woodrow Pimentel Pantoja

Academics and government officials from Africa visited Buenos Aires (Argentina) between October 31st and November 7th, 2016, to discuss and interact with high level public officials in the Executive and Legislative branches and the National Audit Office as well as with academics, media and civil society organizations aimed at working on transparency and accountability.

 

Photo: ELLA Programme/CIPPEC/Rodrigo de la Fuente

Academics and government officials from Africa visited Buenos Aires (Argentina) between October 31st and November 7th, 2016, to discuss and interact with high level public officials in the Executive and Legislative branches and the National Audit Office as well as with academics, media and civil society organizations aimed at working on transparency and accountability.

 

ELLA Programme/CIPPEC/Rodrigo de la Fuente

EPSU (the European Federation of Public Service Unions) and the Friends of the Earth Europe, together with allied social and environmental organisations, staged a sarcastic action today outside the venue of a BusinessEurope meeting on further deregulation in social affairs

Photos from " Advancing Youth Safety and Justice: Transformative Policies, Community Solutions, and Accountable Practices". This program took place between December 1 - 6, 2025, in Salzburg, Austria. If using a photo for external publication, please credit Salzburg Global/Richard Schabetsberger.

Photos from " Advancing Youth Safety and Justice: Transformative Policies, Community Solutions, and Accountable Practices". This program took place between December 1 - 6, 2025, in Salzburg, Austria. If using a photo for external publication, please credit Salzburg Global/Richard Schabetsberger.

Day 3 - 23 Sept, closing event at Woluwe-Saint-Pierre and Schuman. Images taken by Gabriela Carvalho Nascimento

Accountability - There's a Rep for that

Prosperity - There's a Rep for that

Empowerment - There's a Rep for that

Transparency - There's a Rep & app for that!

Accountability CMS Woodrow Pimentel Pantoja

3ie and IEG partnered to organise a highly-interactive and well-attended conference on citizen engagement and accountable government in Washington, DC on 8 April 2019. This one-day public event was part of 3ie’s Washington Evidence Week. Around 130 participants had the opportunity to hear from experts, interact with their peers and share their thoughts on what works and what does not work on citizen engagement that can hold governments accountable. For details of the event, please visit: www.3ieimpact.org/events/evidence-weeks/3ie-and-ieg-confe...

I was recently hired on as a staff photographer for the Georgetonian, the school paper at my college. The next several photos are from my first big assignment, which was this sometimes heated meeting about demanding financial accountability from the administration.

  

Academics and government officials from Africa visited Buenos Aires (Argentina) between October 31st and November 7th, 2016, to discuss and interact with high level public officials in the Executive and Legislative branches and the National Audit Office as well as with academics, media and civil society organizations aimed at working on transparency and accountability.

 

ELLA Programme/CIPPEC/Rodrigo de la Fuente

Caption: Restorative justice offers many benefits – providing space for those affected by harm to ask questions, be heard, and find closure, while supporting those responsible to take accountability and make amends (staged image).

 

Restorative justice is a voluntary, supported process that brings together the person harmed and the person responsible for the harm, when safe and appropriate. It creates a space where those affected can express the impact of what happened, ask questions, and seek answers that are often left unresolved in traditional justice processes. For many, this can offer a sense of closure, emotional healing, and empowerment. For those who have caused harm, it can foster accountability, understanding, and the opportunity to make amends. At its core, restorative justice is about human connection – meeting individual needs, rebuilding trust, and supporting safer, more compassionate communities.

  

Background:

 

Restorative justice is a voluntary process of supported contact between a person who has caused harm and someone who has experienced harm. Where appropriate, this can also include their families and supporters.

 

Restorative justice does not always occur between a person who has experienced harm and/or a person who has caused that harm. It can also be used to address secondary harm caused by organisations or systems, conflict experienced across a community group and/or circles of those who have experienced similar types of harm. This is often referred to as ‘restorative practice’ or a ‘restorative approach’.

 

Restorative justice takes many forms, based on what is best for the parties involved, their needs and their continued safety. This is explored through the planning, preparation stages and continued risk assessment by a specially trained facilitator. Approaches include face-to-face conferences or meetings, letter-writing, video conferencing, ‘shuttle dialogue’ and healing circles.

 

Restorative justice has many evidence-based benefits for those who have experienced harm and also those who have caused harm, their families and communities. These can include being given a choice, empowerment, recovery, improved wellbeing and the process can also help prevent people from causing further harm.

 

Restorative Justice in Scotland:

 

It’s a voluntary and consent-based process in Scotland and any party can discontinue their engagement in the process at any point without losing support from services in place, to ensure trauma-informed practice continues.

 

Restorative justice can be considered by adults, children and young people in Scotland in a way which is responsive to trauma and takes a rights-based approach.

 

Research shows people in Scotland want the option of exploring restorative justice across a range of crime types, including those considered serious and sensitive in nature. This does not mean it will always go ahead, but even the choice is found to be empowering.

 

Restorative justice operates in parallel to the criminal justice and youth justice systems in Scotland and is never used an alternative to this. Outcomes achieved and/or agreed through restorative justice have no impact on any decisions taken throughout the criminal justice process.

The goods shed where victims of the Mukura Massacre were held before being forced into the train wagon (September 2010).

 

Copyright © 2010 Justice and Reconciliation Project

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