Corruption and Transparency in the Water Sector

Monica Guy

Team Lead, Communications and External Relations
+41 61 205 55 12
Biography

This article sets out the experience of Transparency International (TI) in fighting corruption worldwide in the water sector. It focuses on identifying the sources of corruption in the sector and the available toolkits (best practice) for combating it.

Case studies from Cambodia, Japan, Colombia and Pakistan are used to illustrate some of the major points.

Preventing Corruption in Public Procurement

Monica Guy

Team Lead, Communications and External Relations
+41 61 205 55 12
Biography

This 2016 OECD study covers:

PUBLIC PROCUREMENT: A HIGH-RISK AREA FOR CORRUPTION  

  • Public procurement: A EUR 4.2 trillion business
  • Corruption, the bane of public procurement
  • The high cost of corruption in public procurement
  • A myriad of integrity risks along the public procurement cycle    

HOW TO ENHANCE INTEGRITY AND CURB CORRUPTION IN PUBLIC PROCUREMENT        

Political influence in public procurement: balancing between legality and illegality

Monica Guy

Team Lead, Communications and External Relations
+41 61 205 55 12
Biography

A PhD thesis by Mike Balthazar Beke looking at understanding the effect of the Integrity Pact as an anticorruption collective action tool for public procurement through the EU funds and the role of civil society organisations, businesses and contracting authorities in preventing corruption through collective action. 

Integrity Pacts: A Contractual Approach to Facilitate Civic Monitoring of Public Procurement

Monica Guy

Team Lead, Communications and External Relations
+41 61 205 55 12
Biography

Public procurement is one of the highest risk areas for corruption. A public project contaminated with corruption is a recipe for disaster: ordinary citizens suffer from substandard facilities and services; competitive companies lose out when the bidding is rigged; and government money vanishes without making a difference. To rein in procurement corruption in, improving transparency and civic monitoring is vital.

Countering Procurement Corruption with Integrity Pacts: The Indian Experience

Monica Guy

Team Lead, Communications and External Relations
+41 61 205 55 12
Biography

Corruption in government procurement is a massive problem worldwide, especially in developing countries. In an ideal world, measures to combat procurement corruption would include structural changes that would open up monopolies, break cartels, and enact rational, uniform, and effective procurement laws. Sadly, the potential effectiveness of these measures is matched only by the near impossibility of their implementation any time soon. We should continue to push for comprehensive structural solutions to the procurement mess, of course.

G20 Compendium of Good Practices for Promoting Integrity and Transparency in Infrastructure Development

Monica Guy

Team Lead, Communications and External Relations
+41 61 205 55 12
Biography

Quality infrastructure supports sustainable growth, improves well-being and generates jobs. Recognising this, quality infrastructure is both an explicit goal and enabler of the 2030 sustainable development agenda.

Quick Guide 16: Gold laundering

Monica Guy

Team Lead, Communications and External Relations
+41 61 205 55 12
Biography

Mark Pieth, Founder of the Basel Institute on Governance and author of the book Gold Laundering, offers an insight into the risks of human rights and environmental harms in gold supply chains. Where are the risks and responsibilities?

Collective Action with gold refiners, suppliers and other stakeholders, he concludes, can help to clean up the industry.