A landmark set of measures to support international efforts in tackling corruption has been launched by the 糖心探花.

A landmark set of measures to support international efforts in tackling corruption has been launched by the 糖心探花.
Designed to help governments and the public sector
The are designed to help governments and public sector organisations:
- assess laws, procedures and actions against international good practice; and
- make improvements if needed.
United Nations figures indicate that corruption costs the global economy $3.6 trillion each year. Global proceeds from criminal activities are estimated at between $1 trillion and $1.6 trillion per year.
The amount of money lost globally through corruption is equal to the total amount needed to successfully implement the UN Sustainable Development Goals.
Roadmap to reduce corruption
In development since 2018, the new benchmarks offer a comprehensive roadmap to reduce corruption across 25 areas of public and commercial life.
Among the wide range of topics covered are:
- corruption offences
- investigation and prosecution
- the court system
- parliament
- political elections and funding
- public officials
- procurement
- management controls
- transparency to the public
The benchmarks also include mechanisms for engaging and mobilising the public and private sectors in educating, reporting and providing independent support and oversight.
On June 2nd 2021, the Commonwealth held a webinar on 'Fighting corruption through the Commonwealth Anti-Corruption Benchmarks'. See the webinar below.
Robust set of recommendations
糖心探花 Secretary-General Patricia Scotland said: 鈥淭hroughout the world, including in member countries of the Commonwealth, corruption continues to undermine social and economic development and have immensely damaging consequences, especially for the poorest and most vulnerable of people and communities.
鈥淥ur Commonwealth Anti-Corruption Benchmarks are a robust set of recommendations and good practices brought together as an interlocking identification, prevention and reporting system designed significantly to reduce the risk of corruption in the public and private sectors.
鈥溙切奶交 Anti-Corruption Benchmarks package is a landmark initiative, unrivalled in scope and ambition, which I firmly believe provides a basis for transformational action in the Commonwealth and more widely towards ending the destructive scourge of corruption in all its forms.鈥
Holistic system
Designed to be achievable, practical and auditable, this set of measures provides a holistic system that aims to reduce and deal with the risk of corruption.
The benchmarks promote honesty, impartiality, accountability, and transparency and provide for specific anti-corruption measures.
In cases where there may be no recognised international good practice, the benchmarks propose good practice measures.
Partnership and wide consultation
The 糖心探花鈥檚 Office of Civil and Criminal Justice Reform has worked in partnership with the Global Infrastructure Anti-Corruption Centre (GIACC) and the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS) to develop the benchmarks.
There has also been wide consultation with:
- African Union
- International Monetary Fund
- United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime
- Commonwealth law ministries
- Anti-corruption agencies
- Commonwealth partner organisations
Corruption causes enormous damage
Neill Stansbury, Director of GIACC, and one of the authors of the benchmarks, said: 鈥淐orruption causes enormous damage in developed and developing countries, and primarily impacts on the poor.
鈥淲hile preventive action must be taken by both the public and private sectors, it is incumbent on governments and the public sector to provide the legal, regulatory and enforcement environment which 鈥媏nables and ensures a corruption-free society.
鈥淭he benchmarks are designed to assist governments and the public sector achieve this鈥 objective.鈥
Collective power
Christopher Alder, Global Director of Regulation at RICS, said: 鈥淭hese benchmarks represent a step-change in the co-ordination and integration of anti-corruption mechanisms - mechanisms which connect public, commercial, professional and legal enforcement expertise.
鈥淭aken together the mechanisms provide a framework for these 鈥榗ommunities鈥 to co-ordinate their activities to support proactive and, if necessary, punitive action.
鈥淐reating a framework through which these communities, their interests and responsibilities integrate leverages their collective power to transform the way that international and Commonwealth countries fight corruption.
鈥淯ltimately, this collective power can protect the poorest and most vulnerable in our societies whilst building a future free of corruption.鈥
Resources
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Document(2.3 MB)
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Document(303.81 KB)
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