More news
2010
05/03
Anti-Corruption Network meetings held in Paris, 29-31st March 2010.
2010
04/26
Counter Terrorist Financing interactive world map
2010
04/22
Annual Report 2009
2010
02/03
Duvalier assets can not (yet) be returned to Haiti - Swiss Federal Court Decision
2009
12/17
News article (in German) from the Luzerner Zeitung
2009
12/11
General Facts about Switzerland's Financial Center
2009
12/09
International Anti-Corruption Day, 9 December 2009
2009
11/09
Get connected: The Asset Recovery Experts Network
2009
11/02
Working Paper No 7: The Political Economy of Asset Recovery Processes
2009
10/30
Tracing stolen assets - A practitioner's handbook
2009
10/30
Executive Agreement signed between INTERPOL and the Basel Institute on Governance
2009
10/30
Working Paper No 6: Managing Proceeds of Asset Recovery
2009
10/16
Non-State Actors as Standard Setters
2009
09/04
TI Global Corruption Report 2009
2009
05/29
Erica Harper: International Law and Standards Applicable in Natural Disaster Situations
2009
05/19
Countering Terrorist Financing
2009
04/06
Interdisciplinary Conference on Conflict of Interest: Call for Papers
2009
04/01
Annual Report 2008 released
2009
03/25
Basel Institute on Governance awarded StAR training program
2009
02/20
Anti-corruption Law & Enforcement Conference
2008
12/20
Working Paper No 5: Poverty and Corruption: About Poorer and Richer Ways of Life
2008
11/25
Giessbach II, 1-3 October 2008 (Davos, Switzerland): Combating the Financing of Terrorism
2008
08/25
Global Fraud Summit, 14-17 October 2008 (Singapore)
2008
05/25
New address and phone numbers
2008
05/25
Farewell letter from the Executive Director
2008
05/20
Mark Pieth (ed.), Recovering Stolen Assets
2008
03/25
Basel Institute on Governance signs Memorandum with UNICRI
2008
03/25
2nd Annual Euroepan Anti-corruption Summit
2008
01/23
UNCAC: A Bangladesh Compliance and Gap Analysis
2007
12/20
New Working Paper: National Integrity Systems from a Human Rights Perspective
2007
06/04
Compliance in the financial industry
2007
02/23
Corruption - A Glossary of International Criminal Standards
2007
01/23
The international dimensions of judicial accountability
2007
01/20
Working Paper No 3: Verhaltensregeln für die Verwaltung von Vorsorgeeinrichtungen
2006
05/20
Working Paper No 2: Multistakeholder Initiatives to Combat Money Laundering and Bribery
2005
10/22
International aspects of corporate liability and corruption
2004
05/20
Mark Pieth and Gemma Aiolfi (ed.), A Comparative Guide to Anti-Money Laundering
2003
05/20
Working Paper No 1: Anti-Money Laundering: Levelling the Playing Field
2003
04/04
The private sector becomes active: The Wolfsberg process
Displaying results 100 to 142 out of 142
Working Paper No 4: An Evaluation of National Integrity Systems from a Human Rights Perspective
In the past decade the prevention of corruption has been recognised as a prerequisite for sustainable and equitable development. Academics, policy-makers and activists working towards such governance reforms have come a long way in the relatively short period since corruption has been actively addressed both in the North and the South. However, corruption remains a serious problem in many societies, sectors and international transactions, affecting the lives of millions of people who go about their daily business. Transparency International, an international non-governmental organisation against corruption, was one of the first and certainly the most influential NGO to break the spell and speak out against corruption worldwide. In order to support and inform its policy approaches, Transparency International framed an approach called the National Integrity System to better understand the interdependent causes of corruption and to address them more effectively. Strikingly, however, this approach does not draw from or have any linkages with the rights-based approach to development, which has gained tremendous momentum in the same period. This is all the more noteworthy as both the causes and consequences of corruption have obvious linkages with human rights violations. Given this disconnection between the two discourses, the following contribution is aimed at illuminating both approaches individually with regard to their merits in preventing corruption, and trying to define synergies and potential areas of dialogue and interaction. It is structured in the following way: first, the rights based approach to development will be outlined briefly; second, the concept of the National Integrity System will be elaborated, with particular emphasis on, thirdly, the NIS country reports, and fourthly conclusions will be drawn from the comparison of the two approaches.

