Free to Conform : A Comparative Study of Philanthropists’ Accountability

Those who are very wealthy may also be extremely free. Independently wealthy philanthropists epitomize this type of freedom. They seem to be able to act in whichever way they please, as long as they respect the limits of the law. Their freedom also implies that they do not experience as much account...

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Main Author: Weinryb, Noomi
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Uppsala universitet, Företagsekonomiska institutionen 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-251281
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-506-2457-1
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-uu-2512812015-07-24T05:18:55ZFree to Conform : A Comparative Study of Philanthropists’ AccountabilityengWeinryb, NoomiUppsala universitet, Företagsekonomiska institutionenUppsala : Uppsala University, Department of Business Studies2015accountabilityphilanthropistsorganization theoryhuman embryonic stem cell (hESC) research fundingphilanthropycivil societynonprofit sectorThose who are very wealthy may also be extremely free. Independently wealthy philanthropists epitomize this type of freedom. They seem to be able to act in whichever way they please, as long as they respect the limits of the law. Their freedom also implies that they do not experience as much accountability as other funders. Considering philanthropists’ ambitions as policymakers, and given their imposition of performance demands on their grantees, their accountability is relevant to investigate. However, there are no comprehensive comparative studies of philanthropists’ accountability, and there is mainly anecdotal evidence of a lack of accountability being derived from their independent wealth. This dissertation is a study of philanthropists’ accountability. I compare their experienced and exhibited accountability to that of other funders within societies, and I also compare philanthropists’ accountability across societies. I investigate whether philanthropists’ independent wealth influences to whom they are accountable, for what they are accountable, and how they are accountable. To learn about these topics, I examine their accountability relationships, their accountability mechanisms, and how they justify their potentially controversial funding of human embryonic stem cell research. Across these dimensions, I study their legal, financial, hierarchical, peer, professional, political, and fiduciary/social accountability. Empirically, I make a cross-sectional comparison of philanthropists to other funders of human embryonic stem cell research within and across three welfare regimes - liberal California, social democratic Sweden, and statist South Korea. I compare the accountability of independently wealthy philanthropists to that of public agencies, corporations, and fundraising dependent nonprofits. The empirical materials include 101 structured interviews with open-ended questions covering 51 funding organizations, as well as questionnaires explored in ANOVA and social network analysis. The study indicates that philanthropists experience and exhibit less accountability than other funders in some ways, in some contexts. By developing and using a framework to analyze their accountability, I show that philanthropists’ accountability is patterned within the societies in which they fund, and it differs greatly across societies. In California, philanthropists enact themselves as free actors, whereas in Sweden they enact a moral identity as funders of science. In South Korea, there is no clear boundary between philanthropic and corporate accountability. My results point to the contextual limits of philanthropists’ accountability. By enacting their moral identity in a way that conforms to local norms, philanthropists simultaneously retain and enable their continued freedom. In terms of their accountability, philanthropists are free to conform, and they become free by conforming. Doctoral thesis, monographinfo:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-251281urn:isbn:978-91-506-2457-1Doctoral thesis / Företagsekonomiska institutionen, Uppsala universitet, 1103-8454 ; 174application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic accountability
philanthropists
organization theory
human embryonic stem cell (hESC) research funding
philanthropy
civil society
nonprofit sector
spellingShingle accountability
philanthropists
organization theory
human embryonic stem cell (hESC) research funding
philanthropy
civil society
nonprofit sector
Weinryb, Noomi
Free to Conform : A Comparative Study of Philanthropists’ Accountability
description Those who are very wealthy may also be extremely free. Independently wealthy philanthropists epitomize this type of freedom. They seem to be able to act in whichever way they please, as long as they respect the limits of the law. Their freedom also implies that they do not experience as much accountability as other funders. Considering philanthropists’ ambitions as policymakers, and given their imposition of performance demands on their grantees, their accountability is relevant to investigate. However, there are no comprehensive comparative studies of philanthropists’ accountability, and there is mainly anecdotal evidence of a lack of accountability being derived from their independent wealth. This dissertation is a study of philanthropists’ accountability. I compare their experienced and exhibited accountability to that of other funders within societies, and I also compare philanthropists’ accountability across societies. I investigate whether philanthropists’ independent wealth influences to whom they are accountable, for what they are accountable, and how they are accountable. To learn about these topics, I examine their accountability relationships, their accountability mechanisms, and how they justify their potentially controversial funding of human embryonic stem cell research. Across these dimensions, I study their legal, financial, hierarchical, peer, professional, political, and fiduciary/social accountability. Empirically, I make a cross-sectional comparison of philanthropists to other funders of human embryonic stem cell research within and across three welfare regimes - liberal California, social democratic Sweden, and statist South Korea. I compare the accountability of independently wealthy philanthropists to that of public agencies, corporations, and fundraising dependent nonprofits. The empirical materials include 101 structured interviews with open-ended questions covering 51 funding organizations, as well as questionnaires explored in ANOVA and social network analysis. The study indicates that philanthropists experience and exhibit less accountability than other funders in some ways, in some contexts. By developing and using a framework to analyze their accountability, I show that philanthropists’ accountability is patterned within the societies in which they fund, and it differs greatly across societies. In California, philanthropists enact themselves as free actors, whereas in Sweden they enact a moral identity as funders of science. In South Korea, there is no clear boundary between philanthropic and corporate accountability. My results point to the contextual limits of philanthropists’ accountability. By enacting their moral identity in a way that conforms to local norms, philanthropists simultaneously retain and enable their continued freedom. In terms of their accountability, philanthropists are free to conform, and they become free by conforming.
author Weinryb, Noomi
author_facet Weinryb, Noomi
author_sort Weinryb, Noomi
title Free to Conform : A Comparative Study of Philanthropists’ Accountability
title_short Free to Conform : A Comparative Study of Philanthropists’ Accountability
title_full Free to Conform : A Comparative Study of Philanthropists’ Accountability
title_fullStr Free to Conform : A Comparative Study of Philanthropists’ Accountability
title_full_unstemmed Free to Conform : A Comparative Study of Philanthropists’ Accountability
title_sort free to conform : a comparative study of philanthropists’ accountability
publisher Uppsala universitet, Företagsekonomiska institutionen
publishDate 2015
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-251281
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-506-2457-1
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