Oxford Centre for the Study of Corruption and Transparency - podcast cover

Oxford Centre for the Study of Corruption and Transparency

Oxford Universitywww.kellogg.ox.ac.uk
The Oxford Centre for the Study of Corruption and Transparency provides a forum for dialogue among academics, anti-corruption practitioners, business people, legal experts, and government officials. The Centre's research programme examines the interface between government and business and evaluates the effectiveness of accountability tools, with a view to informing public and private sector policy. The Centre also offers specialist courses for corporations, governments, non-governmental organisations and international agencies.
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Episodes

TACOD Conference: Welcome and Introduction to Project

Towards a European strategy to reduce Corruption through Open Data The conference took place under the aegis of the EU-funded project “TACOD” (Towards a European strategy to reduce Corruption by enhancing the use of Open Data) coordinated by RISSC (Research Centre on Security and Crime) and hosted by the University of Oxford. The conference presented results from the research pertaining to the four countries covered in the project (Austria, Italy, Spain, and United Kingdom), as well as policy re...

May 07, 201511 min

New Indicators of High-Level Corruption using Government Contracting Data: Examples from Eastern Europe

Existing measures of corruption often suffer from bias and are too broad to guide policy or test theories. This paper proposes three new indirect indicators of high-level corruption in public procurement, using contract and organisation-level administrat The first is a composite score expressing the probability of corruption occurring in public procurement tenders based on the incidence of ‘red flags’ associated with barriers to competition and unusually high winner market share. The second is a...

Jun 28, 201452 min

New Indicators of High-Level Corruption using Government Contracting Data: Examples from Eastern Europe (Slides)

Existing measures of corruption often suffer from bias and are too broad to guide policy or test theories. This paper proposes three new indirect indicators of high-level corruption in public procurement, using contract and organisation-level administrat The first is a composite score expressing the probability of corruption occurring in public procurement tenders based on the incidence of ‘red flags’ associated with barriers to competition and unusually high winner market share. The second is a...

Jun 28, 2014

Shaming Nations? What works and why in the fight against money laundering and terrorism financing?

The seminar examined the Financial Action Task Force's (FATF) compliance-inducing mechanisms based on an analysis of its naming and shaming practices. The seminar further focused on the implementation of anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing standards in the United States, the United Kingdom and Italy in order to contend that the Task Force’s success in getting countries to comply with its 40 Plus 9 Recommendations can be explained by looking at the conformity-inducing group pres...

Jun 10, 201459 min

Corporate responses to anti-bribery laws

Elizabeth David-Barrett, Centre for Corporate Reputation, Saïd Business School, Oxford University, speaks at the first Oxford Anti-Corruption Conference, Kellogg College, 13 January 2011.

Jan 28, 201119 min

Global corruption status report

Chandrashekhar Krishnan, Transparency International UK, speaks at the first Oxford Anti-Corruption Conference, Kellogg College, 13 January 2011.

Jan 28, 201128 min

The Bribery Act (2010): implications for business

Baron Falconer of Thoroton, Opposition Spokesperson for Justice, formerly Secretary of State for Constitutional Affairs, speaks at the first Oxford Anti-Corruption Conference, Kellogg College, 13 January 2011.

Jan 28, 201135 min

Welcome and opening remarks

Introduction to the first Oxford Anti-Corruption Conference, 13 January 2011, by Jonathan Michie, President of Kellogg College.

Jan 28, 20114 min
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