Accountability in non-profit organisations manifests across multiple dimensions that reflect complex relationships with diverse stakeholders. This article analyses four principal forms of accountability: upward (to donors, regulators, and governments), downward (to communities and beneficiaries), internal (to boards, leaders, and staff), and lateral (to peer organisations and coalitions). Each dimension embodies distinct mechanisms, opportunities, and power dynamics. Upward accountability enhances transparency but risks donor dominance; downward accountability promotes participation but remains underdeveloped; internal accountability ensures governance integrity; and lateral accountability fosters peer learning and sectoral standards. Drawing on comparative evidence, the article demonstrates that accountability frameworks are context-sensitive, shaped by regional and sectoral variations. It concludes that sustainable legitimacy depends on integrating these dimensions into a coherent system that balances compliance and empowerment, oversight and trust, and global standards with local realities.
Anna Neya Kazanskaia (Wed,) studied this question.