Insights of the World Bank Inspection Panel: Responding to Project Gender-Based Violence Complaints Through an Independent Accountability Mechanism

The World Bank Inspection Panel is an independent complaints mechanism for people who believe they have been or will be adversely affected by the World Bank not complying with its operational environmental and social safeguard policies in projects that it funds. The Panel’s process seeks redress for affected communities. It investigates the Bank, not its member or borrower countries. Although the Bank has a 2003 operational directive that seeks to narrow gender gaps and a gender strategy that sets targets, assesses progress toward gender equality, and incorporates gender dimensions into its operations, the directive does not explicitly target harm3 such as gender-based violence (GBV). However, under the Directive for Addressing Risks and Impact on Vulnerable and Disadvantaged Groups pursuant to the 2018 Environmental and Social Framework (ESF) the Bank now has additional coverage, including a requirement that staff conduct due diligence on the risks to individuals and groups who might be adversely affected or excluded from project benefits due to gender, sexual orientation, or gender identity. This report is the sixth in the Panel’s Emerging Lessons Series. It draws on the main lessons of two groundbreaking investigations in which Bank operations faced allegations of inadequate social risk assessment, management, and supervision that contributed to project-related GBV and harm in two transport projects. The insights provided here explain how these investigations inspired institutional transformation of the Bank’s approach to GBV and the importance of Independent Accountability Mechanisms (IAMs) such as the Panel for responding to claims of project-related GBV.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington DC 2023-05-02
Subjects:GENDER-BASED VIOLENCE, REPORTING, ACCOUNTABILITY MECHANISM, SEXUAL HARASSMENT,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099831004242340358/IDU07a1793f40c7c104a720b85e07f8f10bdfe1f
https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/39771
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spelling dig-okr-10986397712023-05-05T02:32:42Z Insights of the World Bank Inspection Panel: Responding to Project Gender-Based Violence Complaints Through an Independent Accountability Mechanism World Bank GENDER-BASED VIOLENCE REPORTING ACCOUNTABILITY MECHANISM SEXUAL HARASSMENT The World Bank Inspection Panel is an independent complaints mechanism for people who believe they have been or will be adversely affected by the World Bank not complying with its operational environmental and social safeguard policies in projects that it funds. The Panel’s process seeks redress for affected communities. It investigates the Bank, not its member or borrower countries. Although the Bank has a 2003 operational directive that seeks to narrow gender gaps and a gender strategy that sets targets, assesses progress toward gender equality, and incorporates gender dimensions into its operations, the directive does not explicitly target harm3 such as gender-based violence (GBV). However, under the Directive for Addressing Risks and Impact on Vulnerable and Disadvantaged Groups pursuant to the 2018 Environmental and Social Framework (ESF) the Bank now has additional coverage, including a requirement that staff conduct due diligence on the risks to individuals and groups who might be adversely affected or excluded from project benefits due to gender, sexual orientation, or gender identity. This report is the sixth in the Panel’s Emerging Lessons Series. It draws on the main lessons of two groundbreaking investigations in which Bank operations faced allegations of inadequate social risk assessment, management, and supervision that contributed to project-related GBV and harm in two transport projects. The insights provided here explain how these investigations inspired institutional transformation of the Bank’s approach to GBV and the importance of Independent Accountability Mechanisms (IAMs) such as the Panel for responding to claims of project-related GBV. 2023-05-02T16:06:29Z 2023-05-02T16:06:29Z 2023-05-02 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099831004242340358/IDU07a1793f40c7c104a720b85e07f8f10bdfe1f https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/39771 English en_US CC BY-NC 3.0 IGO World Bank https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/igo/ application/pdf text/plain Washington DC
institution Banco Mundial
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country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
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databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
en_US
topic GENDER-BASED VIOLENCE
REPORTING
ACCOUNTABILITY MECHANISM
SEXUAL HARASSMENT
GENDER-BASED VIOLENCE
REPORTING
ACCOUNTABILITY MECHANISM
SEXUAL HARASSMENT
spellingShingle GENDER-BASED VIOLENCE
REPORTING
ACCOUNTABILITY MECHANISM
SEXUAL HARASSMENT
GENDER-BASED VIOLENCE
REPORTING
ACCOUNTABILITY MECHANISM
SEXUAL HARASSMENT
World Bank
Insights of the World Bank Inspection Panel: Responding to Project Gender-Based Violence Complaints Through an Independent Accountability Mechanism
description The World Bank Inspection Panel is an independent complaints mechanism for people who believe they have been or will be adversely affected by the World Bank not complying with its operational environmental and social safeguard policies in projects that it funds. The Panel’s process seeks redress for affected communities. It investigates the Bank, not its member or borrower countries. Although the Bank has a 2003 operational directive that seeks to narrow gender gaps and a gender strategy that sets targets, assesses progress toward gender equality, and incorporates gender dimensions into its operations, the directive does not explicitly target harm3 such as gender-based violence (GBV). However, under the Directive for Addressing Risks and Impact on Vulnerable and Disadvantaged Groups pursuant to the 2018 Environmental and Social Framework (ESF) the Bank now has additional coverage, including a requirement that staff conduct due diligence on the risks to individuals and groups who might be adversely affected or excluded from project benefits due to gender, sexual orientation, or gender identity. This report is the sixth in the Panel’s Emerging Lessons Series. It draws on the main lessons of two groundbreaking investigations in which Bank operations faced allegations of inadequate social risk assessment, management, and supervision that contributed to project-related GBV and harm in two transport projects. The insights provided here explain how these investigations inspired institutional transformation of the Bank’s approach to GBV and the importance of Independent Accountability Mechanisms (IAMs) such as the Panel for responding to claims of project-related GBV.
format Working Paper
topic_facet GENDER-BASED VIOLENCE
REPORTING
ACCOUNTABILITY MECHANISM
SEXUAL HARASSMENT
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Insights of the World Bank Inspection Panel: Responding to Project Gender-Based Violence Complaints Through an Independent Accountability Mechanism
title_short Insights of the World Bank Inspection Panel: Responding to Project Gender-Based Violence Complaints Through an Independent Accountability Mechanism
title_full Insights of the World Bank Inspection Panel: Responding to Project Gender-Based Violence Complaints Through an Independent Accountability Mechanism
title_fullStr Insights of the World Bank Inspection Panel: Responding to Project Gender-Based Violence Complaints Through an Independent Accountability Mechanism
title_full_unstemmed Insights of the World Bank Inspection Panel: Responding to Project Gender-Based Violence Complaints Through an Independent Accountability Mechanism
title_sort insights of the world bank inspection panel: responding to project gender-based violence complaints through an independent accountability mechanism
publisher Washington DC
publishDate 2023-05-02
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099831004242340358/IDU07a1793f40c7c104a720b85e07f8f10bdfe1f
https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/39771
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