Governance & Integrity
Transparency and stakeholder engagement in accreditation
How openness and stakeholder input strengthen trust without compromising integrity.
Why this matters
Credible accreditation depends on consistent methods, clear decisions, and evidence that stands up to independent review. This publication translates essential expectations into practical steps so teams can prepare, communicate, and operate with confidence.
Key requirements and expectations
- Separate evaluation from decision to protect impartiality.
- Document roles, responsibilities, and oversight mechanisms.
- Use risk-based controls to prevent bias or errors.
- Record evidence of review, approval, and follow-up.
- Publish clear policies and decision criteria.
- Provide channels for stakeholder feedback.
- Ensure transparency does not compromise confidentiality.
Evidence and records to prepare
- Policies and committee terms of reference.
- Minutes from governance or impartiality meetings.
- Risk registers and mitigation actions.
- Corrective action records when issues are found.
- Public policy pages and stakeholder consultation records.
Common pitfalls to avoid
- Undocumented decision-making or informal approvals.
- Conflicts not disclosed or not managed to completion.
- Governance roles that are unclear or overlapping.
- Lack of evidence that actions were implemented.
- Withholding information that users need to verify status.
Practical checklist
- Confirm governance roles and independence boundaries.
- Document conflict disclosure and recusal steps.
- Maintain an auditable decision trail.
- Verify corrective actions are closed effectively.
- Review public-facing content for clarity and accuracy.