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1 – 6 of 6Andre Proctor and David Bonbright
Working in relationships of mutuality is a necessary precondition for success in any collaborative and systematic effort to improve peoples' lives. Keystone Accountability has…
Abstract
Working in relationships of mutuality is a necessary precondition for success in any collaborative and systematic effort to improve peoples' lives. Keystone Accountability has been working for a decade to develop simple, low cost and actionable measures of performance based on the experience and perceptions of key constituents – and ways of using these data in generative dialogue to deepen insights, strengthen relationships, foster ownership and agency and improve the outcomes of development interventions. They call this method and its accompanying toolbox Constituent Voice.
This chapter briefly explores Keystone's journey of discovery and what they have learnt about using feedback loops (metrics plus dialogue) to better understand and strengthen relationships, performance and emergent impacts in development assistance.
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This paper considers a regulatory model where regulators have less demand information than the firm. Although the firm can over‐earn because of that asymmetry, regulators will…
Abstract
This paper considers a regulatory model where regulators have less demand information than the firm. Although the firm can over‐earn because of that asymmetry, regulators will ultimately notice. From the company's perspective it may be preferable to eliminate the regulators' uncertainty, rather than have the allowed return reduced.
Legal solvency tests play a crucial role in high‐stakes financial transactions. This article presents a brief introduction to legal solvency tests that play important roles in…
Abstract
Legal solvency tests play a crucial role in high‐stakes financial transactions. This article presents a brief introduction to legal solvency tests that play important roles in bankruptcy and corporate law. The author then proceeds to analyze these tests from the perspective of financial economics, and argues that optimal solvency tests should be context‐dependent.