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Accountability
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===Ethical=== {{See also|Social accounting|Environmental accounting}} Within an organization, the principles and practices of ethical accountability aim to improve both the internal standard of individual and group conduct as well as external factors, such as sustainable economic and ecologic strategies. Also, ethical accountability plays an important role in academic fields, such as laboratory experiments and field research. Debates around the practice of ethical accountability on the part of researchers in {{vague|text=the social field|date=July 2023}} β whether professional or others β were explored by Norma R.A. Romm in her work on ''Accountability in Social Research'',<ref name=romm>{{cite book|last=Romm|first=Norma R.A.|title=Accountability in Social Research|year=2001|publisher=Klower Academic|location=New York|isbn=978-0-306-46564-2|url=https://www.springer.com/social+sciences/book/978-0-306-46564-2?detailsPage=reviews}}</ref> and elsewhere.<ref name=truman>{{cite web|last=Truman|first=Carole|title=Review of New Racism: Revisiting Researcher Accountabilities|url=http://www.socresonline.org.uk/16/2/reviews/3.html|publisher=Sociological Research Online|access-date=27 August 2012|year=2010}}</ref> Researcher accountability implies that researchers are cognizant of, and take some responsibility for, the potential impact of their ways of doing research β and of writing it up β on the social fields of which the research is part. Accountability is linked to considering carefully, and being open to challenge in relation to, one's choices concerning how research agendas are framed and the styles in which research results are written.
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