Principled resilience in NGOs: a values-driven conceptual framework for sustaining mission integrity amid paradox and uncertainty
Erhan AtayPurpose
This conceptual paper aims to develop the notion of principled resilience – a values-driven framework explaining how non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and mission-oriented organizations sustain mission integrity, legitimacy and ethical consistency amid financial constraint, accountability pressure and organizational paradox. It addresses the limits of performance-centric resilience models by reframing resilience as a responsibility-oriented capability rather than a reactive response to disruption.
Design/methodology/approach
The paper conceptually integrates paradox theory and resilience-as-practice to build a values-anchored model of responsible organizational adaptation. It identifies three interdependent capacities – mission fidelity, process orientation and outcome independence – that collectively define principled resilience as both an ethical and adaptive system for sustaining legitimacy in uncertain environments.
Findings
Principled resilience explains how organizations navigate tensions between short-term accountability demands and long-term social commitments. It shows that true resilience emerges not merely from adaptive capacity but from embedding responsibility, reflection and value coherence into governance, decision-making and stakeholder engagement practices.
Research limitations/implications
As a conceptual study, the framework requires empirical validation. Future research could examine its propositions across diverse institutional and cultural contexts, assessing how mission fidelity, process orientation and outcome independence jointly influence legitimacy, stakeholder trust and societal outcomes.
Practical implications
The framework equips leaders, donors and policymakers with tools to institutionalize responsibility and moral integrity within governance. By embedding mission fidelity into processes and resisting overreliance on short-term metrics, organizations can strengthen stakeholder confidence and sustain credibility while adapting to uncertainty and resource volatility.
Social implications
Principled resilience enables organizations to balance accountability with ethical commitments, supporting trust-based relationships and long-term societal value – especially in hybrid and legitimacy-sensitive environments.
Originality/value
This paper offers a novel conceptualization of resilience that foregrounds values, legitimacy and responsibility as foundations of organizational endurance. It extends paradox theory and resilience-as-practice while providing a coherent, empirically testable framework for responsible governance and sustainable social impact. In governance terms, the framework specifies how value-aligned routines (process orientation) and metric discipline (outcome independence) operate as governance mechanisms that protect mission integrity and legitimacy under accountability pressure.