“…Recent scholarship, in fact, suggests that there is no single model of board governance, that "one size does not fit all", and that context matters in both corporate governance (Coles et al, 2008;Faleye, 2007) and in a non-profit context (Robinson, 2001;Ostrower and Stone, 2006). Wellens and Jegers (2014) argue that it is appropriate that beneficiaries of activities or donations are involved in organisational policymaking (e.g., Ospina et al, 2002) because people have the right to be involved in decisions that affect their daily lives and because governments attach increasing importance to organisations that strive to forge a close relationship with their beneficiaries (Balser and McClusky, 2005;Van Puyvelde et al, 2012). At the same time, several researchers refer to a certain amount of wariness among stakeholders towards mechanisms involving beneficiaries in NPO governance (Dom and Verhoeven, 2006;O'Dwyer and Unerman, 2009).…”