40-plus former Presidents and Prime Ministers call for an International Anti-Corruption Court
Integrity Initiatives International (III) and Club de Madrid announced today that 42 former Presidents and Prime Ministers are now among…
Integrity Initiatives International (III) and Club de Madrid announced today that 42 former Presidents and Prime Ministers are now among…
Integrity Initiatives International (III) announced today that 30 additional Nobel laureates have signed the Declaration calling for the creation of…
In its most simple terms, this report shows that very few countries actually publish the most important data to counter…
This GI-ACE project, led by Jacqueline Klopp, explores how COVID-19 has impacted small-scale traders in East Africa and the resiliency…
The Global Integrity Anti-Corruption Evidence (GI-ACE) research programme supports 14 research projects around the world generating actionable evidence that policymakers,…
Grantees’ reports to funders are rarely shared with the public. We believe that sharing successes and failures can support learning…
We are a dynamic meeting place that brings together organizations, ideas, and resources to open up governments and empower citizens…
The Open Data Charter has collaborated with the government of Mexico, Transparencia-Mexicana and Cívica Digital, to test how open data…
This commentary from the German Marshall Fund’s Alliance for Securing Democracy is a continuation of a limited number of previous studies that…
The Pandora Papers provide the most comprehensive look yet into the sprawling transnational networks that allow corrupt public officials and economic elite to launder and hide their illicit assets everywhere from the British Virgin Islands to Washington, D.C. The investigation shows that wealthy countries need to do far more to clean up the fiscal paradises they provide for kleptocrats, including by regulating professional enablers such as trust companies in South Dakota in the United States and real estate agents in London. U.S. lawmakers introduced legislation this week to do just that on the national-level. The global scale of the problem that the 11.9 million leaked confidential files from 14 financial service providers implicating public figures from over 90 countries demonstrates there is also the urgent need for a new international institution to hold kleptocrats and their professional enablers accountable.