Oversight Process
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A Oversight Process is a monitoring and evaluation process to ensure that an organization or individual is meeting its or their goals and objectives, and that it or they are doing so in a fair, efficient, and effective manner.
- Example(s):
- Legal Oversight. The process of monitoring and evaluating the implementation and enforcement of laws. It can be conducted by a variety of different actors, including legislative bodies, independent oversight agencies, and internal oversight mechanisms.
- Medical Oversight. The process of monitoring and evaluating the quality of medical care. It can be conducted by a variety of different actors, including individual physicians, medical boards, and government agencies.
- Financial oversight: This type of oversight is used to ensure that financial resources are being used appropriately and efficiently. It can be conducted by internal audit departments, external auditors, and government regulators.
- Environmental oversight: This type of oversight is used to ensure that organizations and individuals are complying with environmental laws and regulations. It can be conducted by government agencies, environmental groups, and private citizens.
- Educational oversight: This type of oversight is used to ensure that schools and other educational institutions are meeting their academic standards and providing a quality education to their students. It can be conducted by state and local education departments, accrediting agencies, and parent-teacher associations.
- Government oversight: This type of oversight is used to ensure that government agencies are operating efficiently and effectively, and that they are accountable to the public. It can be conducted by legislative bodies, independent oversight agencies, and the media.
- [[Corporate oversight: This type of oversight is used to ensure that corporations are operating ethically and in accordance with the law. It can be conducted by corporate boards of directors, independent auditors, and government regulators.
- Non-profit oversight: This type of oversight is used to ensure that non-profit organizations are using their resources efficiently and effectively, and that they are meeting their charitable missions. It can be conducted by boards of directors, government regulators, and watchdog groups.
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- See: Legal Oversight, Governance, Fair Governance, Regulation, Separation of Powers, Congressional Oversight, Public Interest Oversight Board, Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, United Nations Office of Internal Oversight Services.
References
2023
- GBard
- An oversight process is a monitoring and evaluation process that is used to ensure that an organization or individual is meeting its or their goals and objectives, and that it or they are doing so in a fair, efficient, and effective manner. Oversight processes can be used to oversee a wide range of entities, including government agencies, businesses, non-profit organizations, and individuals.
2023
- (Wikipedia, 2023) ⇒ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/oversight#Governance Retrieved:2023-10-5.
- Regulation – rulemaking
- Separation of powers in state governance (checks and balances) - the concept of separate branches of government or agencies exercising authority over one another
- Checks and controls over a particular body or institution:
- Congressional oversight over U.S. federal agencies and other institutions, exercised by the United States Congress
- The ministry of episcopal oversight within Christian churches
- Oversight over the International Federation of Accountants (IFAC), see Public Interest Oversight Board
- Oversight (registration, inspection, standard setting and enforcement) over auditors, see Public Company Accounting Oversight Board
- Internal oversight over United Nations operations, see United Nations Office of Internal Oversight Services.
- An element of organizational governance, see Fair governance.