Tricks for Feigning Good Practice
God, who gets invited to dinner at your place?
How do we get on your guest list?
How do we get on your guest list?
Walk straight, act right, tell the truth.
Don’t hurt your friend, don’t blame your neighbor; despise
the despicable.
Keep your word even when it costs you, make an
honest living, never take a bribe.
You’ll never get blacklisted if you live like this.
This
entry continues the call to the international church-mission community (CMC) to
practice the highest standards of transparency and accountability. It is meant to both encourage and challenge all of us--you and me, right here and right now--and not just to be applicable to "someone out there somewhere" or "all those bad people out there."
Part One features
“Ten Tactics for Feigning Good Practice,” a listing of manipulative maneuvers
for avoiding transparency and accountability (things we don't want to do!). Part Two gives a short update on
the international Nordic Capital Investment KB et al. fraud (NCI): specifically
the request for assistance from the Shine the Light—Together petition and its signatories. Part Three provides five new
resources for good governance and preventing/confronting corruption.
Part
One
Ten Tactics for Feigning Good Practice
Here are some tactical tricks that illustrate
what not to do when we and organizations
are called upon to transparently give an account—be it via routine
self-assessments, post-mortem reviews of mistakes, or special requests to
explain our actions. These tactics are intentional illusions and manipulative maneuvers
that seemingly protect ourselves and our organizations. Ultimately, however they
undermine our credibility, conscience, and anti-corruption safeguards. Don’t go
there. And don’t remain silent when you see them.
1. Delegate the
matter to someone else internally--diffuse it, distance yourself from it—and do
everything to avoid an independent review.
2. Avoid,
reword, or repackage, the issues--obfuscate the facts, or at least talk
tentatively or vaguely about some mistakes maybe in the past and that you or
someone could probably have done a better job…but go no further; rationalize
and/or disguise any culpability.
3. Focus on
minor or “other” things so as to look like you are focusing on the central
things, punctuating it all with the language of transparency-accountability.
4.
Appeal to your “integrity and to “acting with the highest standards" without
demonstrating either.
5. Point out
your past track record. Highlight anything positive that you are
doing/contributing now.
6. Ask and
assume that people should trust you without verification or at least offer some
general assurances that you have or will be looking into the matter and all is
OK.
7. State that
you are under attack or at least that you are not being treated fairly or that
people just don’t understand.
8. Mention
other peoples’ (alleged) problems, question their motives and credibility;
dress someone else in your own dirty clothes, especially if they are noisome question-askers
or whistleblowers.
9. Prop up the “good
old boys’ leadership club,” reshuffle the leadership deck if necessary yet
without changing leaders or their power or how they can cover for each other in
the name of “loyalty” and on behalf of the “greater good,” and try to hold out
until the dust settles and the “uncomfortable” stuff hopefully goes away.
10. So in
short, don’t really do anything with real transparency and accountability;
rather, maintain your self-interests, lifestyle, affiliations, and illusions of
moral congruity, even if it means recalibrating your conscience—essentially,
acting corruptly via complicity, cover-ups, and cowardice.
Part Two
NCI and Petition Updates
NCI and Petition Updates
We are not aware of any further action undertaken by organizations to
investigate how they may have been affected by NCI. Click
here to see the latest update of the paper trail: (August 2014 through January 2016).
It has been over eight years since
the NCI fraud began to be publically confronted (2007). And it has been
nearly 18 months since four of the organizations included in the petition and
several of their leaders were formally presented with the petition. We thus
continue the resolute, public call a) for assistance from all those
affected by the NCI fraud; and b) for verifiable disclosures/independent
reviews (transparency and accountability) by four of the organisations
listed in the Shine the Light-Together petition. Leaders in Youth With a
Mission, Mercy Ships, Youth For Christ, and Crossroads Church received
separate email-letters in August 2014 regarding the Shine the
Light-Together petition with the names and comments of
100+ people who signed it.
It is not too late for
the organizations and people affected by NCI to call for and authorize independent
reviews. It is not too late to model good financial practice and integrity, for
their own sake and for that of the CMC and general public.
Part
Three
Good
Governance and Anti-Corruption Resources
This weblog regularly posts resources to support
good practice for preventing and confronting corruption. Here are five more with
a variety of emphases ranging from the individual to the institutional to the international.
--Corruption
Free Churches Are Possible: Experiences, Values, and Solutions (2010),
by Christoph Stückelberger, Globethics. “This book…is
addressed to people in leadership positions in churches and church-related
institutions. It highlights the important challenge of the need to enhance
transparency and accountability…It holds out the clear hope that this is
possible and offers practical tools for churches and institutions to work
towards this aim…In church advocacy towards governments and international
organisations we often talk of ‘speaking the truth to power’. This book calls churches to also speak the
truth regarding corruption to our own institutions. Even in secular
countries religious leaders are often viewed as having a ‘moral’ authority, and
this is undermined when Christians, churches and religious institutions behave
corruptly.” (Preface, p. 7, bold font added fro emphasis)
--Guidelines for Investigations (2015, revised) CHS
Alliance. This tool assists those in humanitarian and development contexts
who conduct or manage investigations into serious allegations, such as sexual
exploitation and abuse (SEA), fraud and corruption, committed by staff. Also
available in French and Spanish.
--Improving
Leadership and Governance in Nonprofit Organizations, Corsera Course by Vic Murry, PhD and Yvonne
Harrison, PhD, University of Albany,
State University of New York Enroll—Starts 15 February 2016 “This
Specialization consists of three courses plus a Capstone Project: (1) Course 1
topics: The unique nature of the nonprofit sector in society; leadership in
nonprofit organizations and the governance process. (2) Course 2 topics: The
roles and responsibilities of nonprofit organization boards of directors and
the challenges in carrying them out effectively. (3) Course 3 topics: The
critical factors that impact the ability of the board to govern and how to
intentionally change them into positive influences. The Capstone Project: How
to help real boards overcome inertia and resistance to change and improve their
governance effectiveness in an applied service learning experience.” See also
the the Welcome Video.
--Freedom
from Corruption: A Curriculum for People Power Movements, Campaigns, and Civic
Initiatives, Shaazka Beyerle, Senior Advisor, International Center on Nonviolent
Conflict. “This is a free curriculum for members of civil society, activists,
organizers, and concerned citizens about how to effectively struggle against
corruption from the bottom up.”
--Curtailing Corruption: People Power for Accountability and
Justice (2014). “How do citizens counter corruption and exact
accountability from power holders? What strategic value does people power bring
to the anticorruption struggle? Can bottom-up, citizen-based strategies
complement and reinforce top-down anticorruption efforts? Addressing these questions—and demonstrating the
critical role of grassroots efforts in the anticorruption/accountability
equation—Shaazka Beyerle explores how millions of people around the world have
refused to be victims of corruption and become instead the protagonists of
successful nonviolent civic movements to gain accountability and promote
positive political, social, and economic change.” Shaazka Beyerle,
Senior Advisor, International Center on Nonviolent Conflict
*****
Note:
Here is an alternative version of the opening quote.
It is another way, albeit framed negatively,
to encourage right living...
and good practice.
and good practice.
Want
to get blacklisted by God?
Walk
crooked, act wrongly, tell lies.
Hurt your friends, blame your neighbor, despise the virtuous.
Break your word to protect your interests, make a dishonest living, take bribes.
You’ll never get invited to hang out with God if you live like this.
Hurt your friends, blame your neighbor, despise the virtuous.
Break your word to protect your interests, make a dishonest living, take bribes.
You’ll never get invited to hang out with God if you live like this.
Adapted from Psalm
15, The Message