Re: Beyond reproach, accountability and regulation

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Here is a dictionary definition of "Beyond reproach":

Beyond reproach:  So good as to preclude any possibility of criticism.

Last time I looked, RFC 3777 did not include this definition as a requirement for the nomcom in selection of I* candidates.

Good thing, too.  We seem to have "gotten by" with candidates with occasional imperfections over the years.

Given the impossibility of populating all leadership positions with individuals "beyond reproach", or even defining all potentially problematic behaviors, what is the way forward?  How do we move "beyond reproach"?

Years ago, the Direct Marketing Association Nonprofit Federation (of all people)  published an article called 'Moving Beyond Reproach' that talks about moving beyond accountability initiatives:
http://www.the-dma.org/nonprofitfederation/March2005final.pdf

Some quotes:

"though nonprofits could seemingly drown in the flood of accountability initiatives, there is virtually no support for nonprofit leaders in dealing with actual ethical crises..."

"it is clear that the nonprofit sector can do more good by focusing on ways to provide real support for dealing with actual crises than by trying to abolish them by decree."

Some food for thought.

==================================

On Wednesday, April 22, 2009 Clint Chaplin said:

"...Popper said that it is reasonable to assume that sooner or later some rotten scoundrels will gain power. It's not important who they will be precisely, but whatever your political views might be you must agree that a likelihood of such an event is rather high. So whatever law you want to have in your country, don't ask yourself the question "how this law can be used in good hands". Ask the question "how this law can be used when the filthiest, dirtiest, stupidest bastards will rule my country (and sooner or later they probably will)".

Only the law that cannot be used to do anything wrong EVEN by the most vicious ruler is truly good...."

On 4/22/09, Phillip Hallam-baker also wrote:

One of the commentators in a recent thread suggested that another person was "beyond reproach". That has been worrying me as a security person for a number of reasons.  Not least the fact that in my business nobody is ever beyond reproach.

For the past eight years the establishment press in this country told us daily that suggesting that the 'president' was not beyond reproach was  tantamount to committing treason,

It seems to me that many of the social infrastructures that have developed >over the years by IETF members suffer from being dependent on being run by individuals who are and must be beyond reproach.

That is a very fragile model.

If someone is beyond reproach they are beyond accountability.



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