Output list
Conference paper
Protective Opacity: NGO Funders’ Disclosures Under Hostile Conditions
Published 2025
Academy of Management Annual Meeting Proceedings, 1
Academy of Management (AOM) Annual Meeting, 2025-07-25–2025-07-29, Copenhagen, Denmark
Contemporary civil society organisations (CSOs) face ever more settings of closing space, and an emerging literature has begun to show how such hostile conditions shape accountability practices for local CSOs. However, less is known about how funders of such organisations themselves account for involvement with advocacy-based CSOs that are a target of state-sanctioned repression. Drawing on annual reports and associated documents issued by the prominent Russian human rights non-governmental organisation (NGO) Memorial and its international non-governmental funders over three decades, we derive four modes of transparency of funders vis-à-vis their commitment to Memorial and their involvement in Russia. We also analyse shifts and patterns in funders’ public disclosures, against a backdrop of mounting hostility against foreign-funded CSOs in Russia. We find that funders are generally restrictive in what they disclose about their involvement in a hostile setting and responsive to deteriorating circumstances for a potentially vulnerable grantee. In particular, funders embedded in the hostile conditions faced by their grantee engage in protective opacity to render their own and recipient organisations’ activities and associates more opaque. We argue that this shielding tactic can support and sustain funders’ involvement in hostile conditions where public dissemination of information has the potential to be weaponised. Our findings offer a timely problematisation of the hitherto dominant trope that NGO funders are distanced and self-interested promoters of greater transparency and upward accountability.
Conference paper
Published 2018
2
Breaking bias: Leadership excellence and gender in organizations conference, 2018-03-21–2018-03-23, Indiana
Elite business organizations (EBOs) hold a privileged position within the business community, and develop management methods, norms and individuals that serve as models of ‘best practice’ for the economy at large. It is therefore problematic that many EBOs appear unable to achieve the same success and competence in their equality work as in their core business. In this paper we investigate how gender inequality is perpetuated in a Swedish EBO, despite various supportive external and internal structures and processes, and discuss how this can be practically addressed. A case study of FIN, a highly successful global investment company headquartered in Sweden, was performed through interviews with men and women working as investment professionals at the junior, senior and partner level. Paradoxically, we found that while all employees expressed near-universal commitment to improving gender equality, most perceived very limited possibilities to do so despite being members of a powerful business elite. This experience of powerlessness among both women and men was linked to a perceived business imperative. Our empirical analysis outlines the complex relationship between the perceived competence requirements of the core business, and the organization’s perceived capacity to secure and develop such competences in individuals who were not already ‘ideal workers’ (Acker 1990). By juxtaposing perceived problems, solutions and ‘unchangeable’ circumstances, we also identify grounds for productive change in the elite business organization setting.
Presentation
Published 2014
XVIII ISA World Congress of Sociology, 2014-07-13–2014-07-19, Yokohama
Conference paper
Through the looking glass : capital market actors' use of financial information
Published 2013
FRASOP 2013, 2013-12-16–2013-12-17
Conference paper
Value in the balance : changing evaluations of a listed company’s financial strategy
Published 2013
EGOS 2013, 2013-07-04–2013-07-06
Conference paper
Published 2013
5th Workshop on Management Accounting as Social and Organizational Practice, 2013-04-25–2013-04-26
Conference paper
Published 2012
Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Accounting 2012, 2012-07-11–2012-07-13
Conference paper
Published 2012
New Perspectives on Management Accounting 2012, 2012-12-12–2012-12-14
Conference paper
Routinized responses to ‘standardized variation’ in the provision of geriatric nutrition
Published 2011
EGOS 2011, Gothenburg
Conference paper
Single market freedom fighters: The judicialization of informal monitoring practices
Published 2011
European Consortium for Political Research, 2011-08-25–2011-08-27