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Posts Tagged ‘ethics’

Financial Award Disclosure

Nonprofit organizations such as ours have an ethical obligation to our constituents, donors, partners and beneficiaries to conduct ourselves with transparency and accountability. We began this project blog with the intent of keeping the public informed about our activities, accomplishments, decisions and so on. This is in keeping with our desire to build external transparency, public understanding and trust in our organization.

Village Diary is an initiative of the LINK-UP Charity Foundation, an NGO registered in the SW region of the Republic of Cameroon. We’re accountable to the government of Cameroon, but lack 501(c)3 tax exemption status in the United States and thus are not required to file IRS 990 tax returns. These reports are public information for those that know how to find them (on websites such as guidestar.org, for example). To make them more accessible, a best practice for nonprofits is to post them publicly on their blog, along with accounting audits, board activities, annual reports and related information.

As a foreign NGO lacking this special status, we’ve decided to take the lead among Cameroonian recipients of U.S. Embassy funding by making a full public disclosure of the recent financial assistance award granted to Village Diary. This includes the U.S. Department of State financial assistance award form, specifics of the award, correspondence between AfroVisioN Group and LINK-UP with the U.S. Embassy in Yaoundé, and a detailed costing of how the funds will be used for the project.

The amount of this award is US $10,503.39, and was granted for the purpose of providing seed money to launch Village Diary; specifically development of the IT platform, hardware to be used for fieldwork and web server hosting for one year. Details and conditions of the award are contained in the PDF document (below).

It should also be noted that our fundraising efforts were conducted entirely by volunteer staff. 100% of the funds granted in this award will go toward implementation of the Village Diary project, as detailed in our budget allocation.

Every nonprofit is a public trust working to produce something of benefit to the public, and the public is, in a very real sense, the ultimate shareholders of our organization—even more so than our board members, partners or staff.

We’re making these documents available as a single PDF download: federal-assistance-docs.pdf (1.37 MB). We feel it’s a positive step toward increasing transparency and accountability for our organization.

download financial-assistance-docs.pdf

Questions, comments or other feedback are greatly appreciated.

An Ethical Approach to Serving Others

“There are risks and costs to action. But they are far less than the long-range risks of comfortable inaction.” -John F. Kennedy

“Wherever there is a human being, there is an opportunity for kindness.” –Seneca

Viola Allo, a Cameroonian-born ethnographer and writer based in California, joined our team to help us design a project sensitive to the needs of our beneficiaries. In doing so, she draws on her training in cultural anthropology and ethnographic fieldwork she performed in Nigeria and Cameroon. Much of her research and personal interest lies in issues faced by rural African women, so her contributions are invaluable to our effort.

As the Village Diary operations manual began to take shape, Viola suggested that we needed a section devoted to ethical considerations for the project. We decided from the start that our project would be guided by the highest standards of ethics in our conduct within the community. Few would disagree with such a sentiment. However, for a project such as ours—or any humanitarian or development effort, for that matter—what does this mean, practically?

To address this question, we began with an overview of International Development Ethics and studied the United Nations Declaration on Rights of Indigenous Peoples, Convention on the Rights of the Child and related documents. Viola added the American Anthropological Association’s Code of Ethics (PDF) and provided a sample consent form used in her fieldwork. These sources helped us frame the needs for an ethical approach in our work, but we still lacked a practical how-to guide.

Many hours and revisions later, Viola has crafted just such a guide. From her opening section on Ethics & Values:

“Our ethical standards reveal the conscience of our project and our efforts. Over time, the values we uphold for the project should become a part of our team’s moral code—a list of things we see as true, a core of philosophies and practices we will commit to, and a set of principles we will not compromise. These things will guide the decisions we make.”

She goes on to outline a code of ethics that includes key elements such as transparency, openness, privacy, confidentiality, context and respect. Viola outlines her concept of a “People First” approach:

“We will put the wellbeing of clients first. Project goals and progress are important but secondary. Our personal ambitions, too, are secondary. Our primary concern is the wellbeing of those we serve… We must strive, as best we can, to see those we serve as people we can learn from. They are the experts on their lives and worlds, and as such, they are our teachers.”

Using this as a foundation, Viola expands on ethical considerations for services offered to vulnerable individuals including women, children and victims of abuse. She then tackles the thorny issue of collecting information from these individuals, with a focus on informed consent, data collection methods and the roles of fieldworkers and custodians.

Since the Village Diary IT platform is designed to collect, store and disseminate information related to our beneficiaries, Viola’s guide also addresses ethics in computer and Internet data storage, transparency and sharing data with donors, guardians, sponsors, and beneficiaries.

Viola’s work on this topic provides both a core philosophy and a practical guide to ethics in service to others. Perhaps its greatest value is that it is applicable not only to our project; it may be used to inform an ethical approach for any organization engaged in humanitarian, aid or development work. In the spirit of transparency and collaboration, we’re offering Viola’s complete ethics guide in PDF format.

Download Ethics, Values and Serving Others (PDF) by Viola Allo.

As a working document, Viola and the Village Diary team value any and all feedback on it. If you find it useful, have comments or additions to it, feel free to post your thoughts below.

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