[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":581},["ShallowReactive",2],{"publication-evaluacion-pefa-de-la-gestion-de-finanzas-publicas-en-gobiernos-subnacionales-del-peru":3,"related-evaluacion-pefa-de-la-gestion-de-finanzas-publicas-en-gobiernos-subnacionales-del-peru":161},[4],{"id":5,"status":6,"sort":7,"date_created":8,"date_updated":9,"nid":10,"slug":11,"title":12,"body":13,"citation":14,"language":15,"year":16,"publisher":17,"date_published":18,"external":19,"topic":20,"link_internal":22,"link_external":23,"featured":19,"topics":57,"languages":58,"type":59,"area":7,"programme":7,"websites":7,"summary":7,"pdf_text":7,"main_points":7,"short_version":7,"subtitle":7,"image":61,"countries":71,"tags":106,"pdf":159,"authors":160},1972,"published",null,"2022-04-27T11:55:36.000Z","2026-05-23T20:08:33.000Z",631,"evaluacion-pefa-de-la-gestion-de-finanzas-publicas-en-gobiernos-subnacionales-del-peru","Evaluación PEFA de la gestión de finanzas publicas en gobiernos subnacionales del Perú","These Public Expenditure and Accountability (PEFA) evaluation reports are the results of a joint project carried out by evaluators, authorities and regional government officials to systematically measure the quality of public finance management in different regions of Peru.\n\nThe quality control process followed for the preparation of this report complies with all the requirements of the Secretariat for the Public Expenditure and Accountability Program (PEFA) in Peru. \n\nEvaluations are available (in Spanish) for the regions of Apurímac, Cusco, Lambayeque, La Libertad, San Martín and Piura, for the province of Abancay and for the municipalities of Cusco, Chiclayo, Trujillo and San Martín.\n\nThese evaluations and reports were developed in the context of the \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fbaselgovernance.org\u002Fpublic-finance-peru\">Subnational Public Finance Management Strengthening Programme in Peru\u003C\u002Fa>, funded by the State Secretariat for Economic Affairs of Switzerland (SECO) and implemented by the Basel Institute on Governance through its Peru office. View all publications of the \u003Ca href=\"http:\u002F\u002Fgfpsubnacional.pe\u002Fpublicaciones\u002F\">Programa GFP Subnacional en el Perú\u003C\u002Fa>.\n\n ","","Spanish",2017,"Basel Institute on Governance – Peru Office","2017-07-01",false,[21],"Public Finance Management",[],[24,27,30,33,36,39,42,45,48,51,54],{"url":25,"caption":26},"http:\u002F\u002Fgfpsubnacional.pe\u002Fwp-content\u002Fuploads\u002F2018\u002F06\u002F001-Evaluac-PEFA-GRA.pdf","View PEFA evaluation for Apurímac region",{"url":28,"caption":29},"http:\u002F\u002Fgfpsubnacional.pe\u002Fwp-content\u002Fuploads\u002F2018\u002F06\u002F002-Evaluac-PEFA-GRC.pdf"," View PEFA evaluation for Cusco region",{"url":31,"caption":32},"http:\u002F\u002Fgfpsubnacional.pe\u002Fwp-content\u002Fuploads\u002F2018\u002F06\u002F003-Evaluac-PEFA-GRL.pdf"," View PEFA evaluation for Lambayeque region",{"url":34,"caption":35},"http:\u002F\u002Fgfpsubnacional.pe\u002Fwp-content\u002Fuploads\u002F2018\u002F06\u002F004-Evaluac-PEFA-GRLL.pdf"," View PEFA evaluation for La Libertad region",{"url":37,"caption":38},"http:\u002F\u002Fgfpsubnacional.pe\u002Fwp-content\u002Fuploads\u002F2018\u002F06\u002F005-Evaluac-PEFA-GRSM.pdf"," View PEFA evaluation for San Martín region",{"url":40,"caption":41},"http:\u002F\u002Fgfpsubnacional.pe\u002Fportfolio\u002Fgobierno-regional-de-piura-grp\u002F"," View PEFA evaluation for Piura region",{"url":43,"caption":44},"http:\u002F\u002Fgfpsubnacional.pe\u002Fwp-content\u002Fuploads\u002F2018\u002F06\u002F006-Evaluac-PEFA-MPA.pdf"," View PEFA evaluation for Abancay province",{"url":46,"caption":47},"http:\u002F\u002Fgfpsubnacional.pe\u002Fwp-content\u002Fuploads\u002F2018\u002F06\u002F007-Evaluac-PEFA-MPC.pdf"," View PEFA evaluation for Cusco municipality",{"url":49,"caption":50},"http:\u002F\u002Fgfpsubnacional.pe\u002Fwp-content\u002Fuploads\u002F2018\u002F06\u002F008-Evaluac-PEFA-MPCH.pdf"," View PEFA evaluation for Chiclayo municipality",{"url":52,"caption":53},"http:\u002F\u002Fgfpsubnacional.pe\u002Fwp-content\u002Fuploads\u002F2018\u002F06\u002F009-Evaluac-PEFA-MPT.pdf"," View PEFA evaluation for Trujillo municipality",{"url":55,"caption":56},"http:\u002F\u002Fgfpsubnacional.pe\u002Fwp-content\u002Fuploads\u002F2018\u002F06\u002F010-Evaluac-PEFA-MPSM.pdf"," View PEFA evaluation for San Martín municipality",[21],[15],[60],"Report",{"id":62,"storage":63,"filename_disk":64,"filename_download":65,"title":65,"type":66,"created_on":8,"modified_on":8,"charset":7,"filesize":67,"width":68,"height":69,"duration":7,"embed":7,"description":7,"location":7,"tags":7,"metadata":70,"focal_point_x":7,"focal_point_y":7,"tus_id":7,"tus_data":7,"uploaded_on":8},"e3c918aa-b34e-403b-8169-55c0fab56724","local","e3c918aa-b34e-403b-8169-55c0fab56724.jpg","socio-apurimac.jpg","image\u002Fjpeg",62056,570,770,{},[72],{"id":73,"publications_id":74,"countries_id":100},892,{"id":5,"status":6,"sort":7,"user_created":75,"date_created":8,"user_updated":76,"date_updated":9,"nid":10,"slug":11,"image":62,"title":12,"body":13,"citation":14,"language":15,"year":16,"publisher":17,"date_published":18,"external":19,"topic":77,"link_internal":78,"link_external":79,"featured":19,"topics":91,"languages":92,"type":93,"area":7,"programme":7,"websites":7,"summary":7,"pdf_text":7,"main_points":7,"short_version":7,"subtitle":7,"countries":94,"tags":95,"pdf":98,"authors":99},"03bebfd8-0b40-4a2a-820d-b9d9c13b9de6","3d9ff205-1640-4f34-b5b6-86977f51bbd6",[21],[],[80,81,82,83,84,85,86,87,88,89,90],{"url":25,"caption":26},{"url":28,"caption":29},{"url":31,"caption":32},{"url":34,"caption":35},{"url":37,"caption":38},{"url":40,"caption":41},{"url":43,"caption":44},{"url":46,"caption":47},{"url":49,"caption":50},{"url":52,"caption":53},{"url":55,"caption":56},[21],[15],[60],[73],[96,97],5041,5042,[],[],{"id":101,"name":102,"code":103,"latitude":104,"longitude":105},171,"Peru","PE",-9.18997,-75.01515,[107,133],{"id":96,"publications_id":108,"tags_id":130},{"id":5,"status":6,"sort":7,"user_created":75,"date_created":8,"user_updated":76,"date_updated":9,"nid":10,"slug":11,"image":62,"title":12,"body":13,"citation":14,"language":15,"year":16,"publisher":17,"date_published":18,"external":19,"topic":109,"link_internal":110,"link_external":111,"featured":19,"topics":123,"languages":124,"type":125,"area":7,"programme":7,"websites":7,"summary":7,"pdf_text":7,"main_points":7,"short_version":7,"subtitle":7,"countries":126,"tags":127,"pdf":128,"authors":129},[21],[],[112,113,114,115,116,117,118,119,120,121,122],{"url":25,"caption":26},{"url":28,"caption":29},{"url":31,"caption":32},{"url":34,"caption":35},{"url":37,"caption":38},{"url":40,"caption":41},{"url":43,"caption":44},{"url":46,"caption":47},{"url":49,"caption":50},{"url":52,"caption":53},{"url":55,"caption":56},[21],[15],[60],[73],[96,97],[],[],{"id":131,"name":132},1378,"Public financial management",{"id":97,"publications_id":134,"tags_id":156},{"id":5,"status":6,"sort":7,"user_created":75,"date_created":8,"user_updated":76,"date_updated":9,"nid":10,"slug":11,"image":62,"title":12,"body":13,"citation":14,"language":15,"year":16,"publisher":17,"date_published":18,"external":19,"topic":135,"link_internal":136,"link_external":137,"featured":19,"topics":149,"languages":150,"type":151,"area":7,"programme":7,"websites":7,"summary":7,"pdf_text":7,"main_points":7,"short_version":7,"subtitle":7,"countries":152,"tags":153,"pdf":154,"authors":155},[21],[],[138,139,140,141,142,143,144,145,146,147,148],{"url":25,"caption":26},{"url":28,"caption":29},{"url":31,"caption":32},{"url":34,"caption":35},{"url":37,"caption":38},{"url":40,"caption":41},{"url":43,"caption":44},{"url":46,"caption":47},{"url":49,"caption":50},{"url":52,"caption":53},{"url":55,"caption":56},[21],[15],[60],[73],[96,97],[],[],{"id":157,"name":158},1371,"Public governance",[],[],[162,194,250,321,361,395,430,461,496,545],{"id":163,"slug":164,"title":165,"status":6,"nid":166,"year":167,"body":168,"external":19,"topic":169,"language":15,"type":170,"date_published":172,"image":173,"citation":14,"publisher":17,"link_internal":174,"link_external":175,"authors":176,"countries":177,"tags":180,"pdf":187,"topics":189,"featured":19,"languages":190,"summary":7,"programme":7,"area":7,"websites":7,"pdf_text":7,"sort":7,"user_created":75,"date_created":191,"user_updated":76,"date_updated":192,"main_points":7,"short_version":7,"subtitle":7,"link":193},1923,"gestion-de-riesgos-para-la-prevencion-de-corrupcion-en-el-peru","Gestión de riesgos para la prevención de corrupción en el Perú",623,2018,"## Risk management for the prevention of corruption in Peru\n\nThis is the first set of guidelines specific to Peru that compiles international experience in combating corruption from the angle of risk-based prevention.\n\nThe publication was developed in the context of the \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fbaselgovernance.org\u002Fpublic-finance-peru\">Subnational Public Finance Management Strengthening Programme in Peru\u003C\u002Fa>, funded by the State Secretariat for Economic Affairs of Switzerland (SECO) and implemented by the Basel Institute on Governance through its Peru office. \n\nIt is currently only available in Spanish. View all publications of the \u003Ca href=\"http:\u002F\u002Fgfpsubnacional.pe\u002Fpublicaciones\u002F\">Programa GFP Subnacional en el Perú\u003C\u002Fa>.",[21],[171],"Guidelines","2018-11-01","https:\u002F\u002Fjam.baselgovernance.org\u002Fapi\u002Fassets\u002Fcdf6a520-2949-4253-9d62-6876330ea9da?width=600&height=840",[],[],[],[178],{"countries_id":179},{"id":101,"name":102},[181,185],{"tags_id":182},{"id":183,"name":184},859,"Corruption risks",{"tags_id":186},{"id":131,"name":132},[188],1973,[21],[15],"2022-04-27T11:55:00.000Z","2026-05-23T20:08:19.000Z","\u002Fresources\u002Fpublications\u002Fgestion-de-riesgos-para-la-prevencion-de-corrupcion-en-el-peru",{"id":195,"slug":196,"title":197,"status":6,"nid":198,"year":199,"body":200,"external":19,"topic":201,"language":206,"type":207,"date_published":209,"image":210,"citation":211,"publisher":212,"link_internal":213,"link_external":217,"authors":218,"countries":223,"tags":232,"pdf":242,"topics":244,"featured":19,"languages":246,"summary":7,"programme":7,"area":7,"websites":7,"pdf_text":7,"sort":7,"user_created":75,"date_created":247,"user_updated":76,"date_updated":248,"main_points":7,"short_version":7,"subtitle":7,"link":249},2045,"working-paper-19-high-level-reporting-mechanisms-colombia-and-ukraine","Working Paper 19: High Level Reporting Mechanisms in Colombia and Ukraine",65,2015,"The responsibility for governments to address bribe solicitation derives from internationally recognised anticorruption standards all of which prohibit the ‘demand side’ of bribery, namely, the solicitation by a public official of an undue advantage.\n\nSo far however, most governmental anti-bribery efforts have focused on the offering or giving of bribes by companies and their employees. They have neglected practical solutions to support companies that are faced with explicit or implicit demands for bribes when dealing with public administrations, for example in the context of public contracts, business licensing or tax audits. Unless they pay these bribes, companies may risk losing business or face obstructions to doing business.\n\nThe concept of \u003Ca href=\"\u002Fnode\u002F1098\">high level reporting mechanisms (HLRM)\u003C\u002Fa> has been devised to help address this gap experienced by companies that are solicited for bribes or subject to other forms of extortion and unfair treatment. Two countries have pioneered the concept so far, namely Colombia and Ukraine.\n\nThis paper describes the underlying purpose and principles of the HLRM, reviews how this was translated into national mechanisms in these countries, and offers some initial comments on the lessons learned.\n\n### About this Working Paper\n\nThis paper is part of the Basel Institute on Governance Working Paper Series, \u003Ca href=\"\u002Fpublications?type[]=255\">ISSN: 2624-9650\u003C\u002Fa>.",[202,203,204,21,205],"Anti-Money Laundering","Collective Action","HLRM","Public Governance","English",[208],"Working Paper","2015-02-01","https:\u002F\u002Fjam.baselgovernance.org\u002Fapi\u002Fassets\u002F9b00ca24-f1c5-46bd-8e0f-ece2cb9902d9?width=600&height=840","Wehrle, F. (2015). 'High Level Reporting Mechanisms in Colombia and Ukraine'. Working Paper 19, Basel Institute on Governance","Basel Institute on Governance",[214],{"url":215,"caption":216},"\u002Fresources\u002Fpublications?type=Working%20Paper"," View all Working Papers",[],[219],{"authors_id":220},{"id":221,"name":222},349,"Frédéric Wehrle",[224,228],{"countries_id":225},{"id":226,"name":227},47,"Colombia",{"countries_id":229},{"id":230,"name":231},225,"Ukraine",[233,236,240],{"tags_id":234},{"id":235,"name":203},909,{"tags_id":237},{"id":238,"name":239},982,"Anti-corruption",{"tags_id":241},{"id":131,"name":132},[243],2087,[202,203,204,21,245],"Corruption Prevention and Public Governance",[206],"2022-04-27T11:56:25.000Z","2026-06-02T14:09:08.000Z","\u002Fresources\u002Fpublications\u002Fworking-paper-19-high-level-reporting-mechanisms-colombia-and-ukraine",{"id":251,"slug":252,"title":253,"status":6,"nid":254,"year":255,"body":256,"external":19,"topic":257,"language":206,"type":259,"date_published":260,"image":261,"citation":14,"publisher":262,"link_internal":263,"link_external":264,"authors":271,"countries":288,"tags":293,"pdf":314,"topics":316,"featured":19,"languages":7,"summary":7,"programme":7,"area":7,"websites":7,"pdf_text":7,"sort":7,"user_created":75,"date_created":317,"user_updated":76,"date_updated":318,"main_points":319,"short_version":7,"subtitle":7,"link":320},2433,"addressing-conflicts-interest-and-corruption-indonesias-energy-transition","Addressing conflicts of interest and corruption in Indonesia’s energy transition",2936,2026,"This U4 Issue analyses Indonesia's ambitious energy transition and highlights how political finance, weak regulations and a \"revolving door\" of personnel between public office and the private sector create vulnerabilities. The publication was produced by U4 and the Basel Institute on Governance through its Green Corruption programme.\n\n\u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fbaselgovernance.org\u002Fsites\u002Fdefault\u002Ffiles\u002F2026-02\u002FAddressing-conflicts-of-interest-and-corruption-in-indonesia-s-energy-transition_U4-Issue.pdf\">Download publication here\u003C\u002Fa>.\n\n### About the paper\n\nConflicts of interest and corruption in Indonesia's political economy pose significant risks to its energy transition, including the Just Energy Transition Partnership. Existing legal and institutional frameworks are fragmented, inconsistently applied, and often fail to address the risk of state capture by powerful political and economic actors, especially in the extractive and energy sectors.\n\nThe reliance on fossil fuel industries for political financing and the monopolistic nature of state-owned entities further complicate the shift to a low- or no-carbon system, despite the country's ambitious renewable energy targets.\n\nPotential pathways to greater anti-corruption resilience lie in improvements to beneficial ownership transparency and strengthening regulation, monitoring and sanctioning of conflict of interest violations.\n",[258],"Green Corruption",[60],"2026-02-24","https:\u002F\u002Fjam.baselgovernance.org\u002Fapi\u002Fassets\u002Fd97f2ca5-300d-45c9-9de9-33152b72f96c?width=600&height=840","U4 Anti-Corruption Resource Centre",[],[265,268],{"url":266,"caption":267},"https:\u002F\u002Fwww.u4.no\u002Fpublications\u002Faddressing-conflicts-of-interest-and-corruption-in-indonesia-s-energy-transition"," View on U4 website",{"url":269,"caption":270},"https:\u002F\u002Fwww.u4.no\u002Fblog\u002Fimproving-anti-corruption-resilience-in-indonesia-s-energy-transition"," Read related U4 blog",[272,276,280,284],{"authors_id":273},{"id":274,"name":275},581,"Robert Forster",{"authors_id":277},{"id":278,"name":279},582,"Aled Williams",{"authors_id":281},{"id":282,"name":283},523,"Lakso Anindito",{"authors_id":285},{"id":286,"name":287},579,"Dr Amanda Cabrejo le Roux",[289],{"countries_id":290},{"id":291,"name":292},99,"Indonesia",[294,296,300,304,306,310],{"tags_id":295},{"id":238,"name":239},{"tags_id":297},{"id":298,"name":299},818,"Anti-money laundering",{"tags_id":301},{"id":302,"name":303},804,"Natural resources",{"tags_id":305},{"id":157,"name":158},{"tags_id":307},{"id":308,"name":309},1236,"Compliance",{"tags_id":311},{"id":312,"name":313},973,"Corruption",[315],2489,[258],"2026-02-27T15:11:31.000Z","2026-05-23T20:08:18.000Z","- Corruption and conflicts of interest are embedded in the energy transition process due to the strong links between political power, private wealth (especially from extractive industries) and public office holders.\n- Existing anti-corruption regulations are often vague, fragmented across different legal instruments, and suffer from inconsistent enforcement, which creates loopholes susceptible to manipulation.\n- Progress in renewable energy uptake is slowed by the enduring influence and interests of fossil fuel incumbents who benefit from subsidies that keep coal an artificially cheap and viable energy source.\n- The Just Energy Transition Partnership is vulnerable to misallocations due to concentrated decision-making power, limited transparency in project selection and insufficient involvement of national anti-corruption bodies and civil society in its planning.\n- Improving transparency of beneficial ownership and strengthening the monitoring and sanctioning of conflict of interest violations are possible pathways to build greater anti-corruption resilience, though these institutional efforts alone are insufficient to fully address state capture dynamics.","\u002Fresources\u002Fpublications\u002Faddressing-conflicts-interest-and-corruption-indonesias-energy-transition",{"id":322,"slug":323,"title":324,"status":6,"nid":325,"year":167,"body":326,"external":19,"topic":327,"language":328,"type":329,"date_published":330,"image":331,"citation":14,"publisher":212,"link_internal":332,"link_external":333,"authors":334,"countries":343,"tags":348,"pdf":353,"topics":356,"featured":19,"languages":357,"summary":7,"programme":7,"area":7,"websites":7,"pdf_text":7,"sort":7,"user_created":75,"date_created":358,"user_updated":76,"date_updated":359,"main_points":7,"short_version":7,"subtitle":7,"link":360},1926,"roundtable-pilot-high-level-reporting-mechanism-argentina","Roundtable on the pilot High Level Reporting Mechanism in Argentina",673,"The Basel Institute on Governance and the \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fwww.udesa.edu.ar\u002FUnidades-Academicas\u002FCentros\u002FCentro-de-Estudios-Anticorrupcion\">Centre for Anti-Corruption Studies\u003C\u002Fa> (CEA) of the University of San Andrés, Argentina convened a private-sector roundtable in Buenos Aires on 4 October 2018.\n\nThe purpose was to hear feedback and exchange on the recent implementation of the pilot High Level Reporting Mechanism (HLRM), in the tender carried out by the Argentine National Roads Authority within the framework of the Secure Roads and Routes Network Project using the new Public-Private Participation (PPP) legal framework adopted by the Argentine Republic.",[203,204],"English, Spanish",[60],"2018-10-04","https:\u002F\u002Fjam.baselgovernance.org\u002Fapi\u002Fassets\u002F62c540f5-390e-437c-ad4d-8fc37e925f6f?width=600&height=840",[],[],[335,339],{"authors_id":336},{"id":337,"name":338},321,"Mirna Adjami",{"authors_id":340},{"id":341,"name":342},388,"Erica Pedruzzi",[344],{"countries_id":345},{"id":346,"name":347},11,"Argentina",[349,351],{"tags_id":350},{"id":235,"name":203},{"tags_id":352},{"id":131,"name":132},[354,355],1974,1975,[203,204],[206,15],"2022-04-27T11:55:02.000Z","2026-05-23T20:08:20.000Z","\u002Fresources\u002Fpublications\u002Froundtable-pilot-high-level-reporting-mechanism-argentina",{"id":188,"slug":362,"title":363,"status":6,"nid":364,"year":16,"body":365,"external":19,"topic":366,"language":206,"type":367,"date_published":18,"image":368,"citation":369,"publisher":212,"link_internal":370,"link_external":372,"authors":373,"countries":378,"tags":379,"pdf":388,"topics":389,"featured":19,"languages":391,"summary":7,"programme":7,"area":7,"websites":7,"pdf_text":7,"sort":7,"user_created":75,"date_created":392,"user_updated":76,"date_updated":393,"main_points":7,"short_version":7,"subtitle":7,"link":394},"working-paper-23-new-perspectives-e-government-and-prevention-corruption","Working Paper 23: New perspectives in e-government and the prevention of corruption",69,"Does e-government have an impact in reducing corruption? Do e-government solutions sufficiently take private sector perspectives into account to maximise its potential for addressing corruption risks? \n\nThis paper addresses these and additional questions about the dynamic between governments and the private sector with respect to harnessing e-governance tools for corruption prevention. It is written primarily from a private sector perspective and for private sector actors who are interested in a more comprehensive understanding of the scope and examples of e-government solutions to improve their anti-corruption policies, but concludes with numerous recommendations for the private sector and governments alike.\n\n### About this Working Paper\n\nThis paper is part of the Basel Institute on Governance Working Paper Series, \u003Ca href=\"\u002Fpublications?type[]=255\">ISSN: 2624-9650\u003C\u002Fa>.\n\nThe Basel Institute on Government was granted funding by GlaxoSmithKline (GSK). The work was undertaken between September 2016 and May 2017.",[203,309,205],[60,208],"https:\u002F\u002Fjam.baselgovernance.org\u002Fapi\u002Fassets\u002F60f7cdca-cb55-459c-b50d-4e04889648a8?width=600&height=840","Aiolfi, G. (2017). 'New perspectives in e-government and the prevention of corruption'. Working Paper 23, Basel Institute on Governance",[371],{"url":215,"caption":216},[],[374],{"authors_id":375},{"id":376,"name":377},289,"Gemma Aiolfi",[],[380,382,386],{"tags_id":381},{"id":157,"name":158},{"tags_id":383},{"id":384,"name":385},1377,"Technology",{"tags_id":387},{"id":238,"name":239},[16],[203,390,245],"Business Integrity Ethics and Compliance",[206],"2022-04-27T11:55:37.000Z","2026-06-02T14:09:01.000Z","\u002Fresources\u002Fpublications\u002Fworking-paper-23-new-perspectives-e-government-and-prevention-corruption",{"id":396,"slug":397,"title":398,"status":6,"nid":399,"year":400,"body":401,"external":19,"topic":402,"language":206,"type":403,"date_published":404,"image":405,"citation":14,"publisher":406,"link_internal":407,"link_external":408,"authors":412,"countries":413,"tags":414,"pdf":423,"topics":425,"featured":19,"languages":426,"summary":7,"programme":7,"area":7,"websites":7,"pdf_text":7,"sort":7,"user_created":75,"date_created":427,"user_updated":76,"date_updated":428,"main_points":7,"short_version":7,"subtitle":7,"link":429},2031,"judicial-systems-and-corruption","Judicial systems and corruption",196,2016,"The Basel Institute on Governance and the International Bar Association (IBA) have published a study on typologies of corruption in the judiciary in the context of the IBA's Judicial Integrity Initiative.\n\nOne of the key findings of the study is that while bribery is particularly prevalent when the rule of law is considered weak, undue political influence as a form of corruption occurs in countries across the board regardless of governance structures.",[205],[60],"2016-01-01","https:\u002F\u002Fjam.baselgovernance.org\u002Fapi\u002Fassets\u002F2619bbd1-e0af-42c6-9df4-f7eeb4f11ffa?width=600&height=840","International Bar Association",[],[409],{"url":410,"caption":411},"https:\u002F\u002Fwww.ibanet.org\u002FLegal_Projects_Team\u002Fjudicialintegrityinitiative.aspx"," View on International Bar Association website",[],[],[415,419,421],{"tags_id":416},{"id":417,"name":418},1373,"Corruption prevention",{"tags_id":420},{"id":312,"name":313},{"tags_id":422},{"id":157,"name":158},[424],2070,[245],[206],"2022-04-27T11:56:16.000Z","2026-05-31T22:52:12.000Z","\u002Fresources\u002Fpublications\u002Fjudicial-systems-and-corruption",{"id":431,"slug":432,"title":433,"status":6,"nid":434,"year":199,"body":435,"external":19,"topic":436,"language":206,"type":438,"date_published":439,"image":440,"citation":14,"publisher":212,"link_internal":441,"link_external":442,"authors":443,"countries":448,"tags":449,"pdf":454,"topics":456,"featured":19,"languages":457,"summary":7,"programme":7,"area":7,"websites":7,"pdf_text":7,"sort":7,"user_created":75,"date_created":458,"user_updated":76,"date_updated":459,"main_points":7,"short_version":7,"subtitle":7,"link":460},2057,"learning-review-transparency-internationals-integrity-pacts-public-procurement","Learning Review: Transparency International's Integrity Pacts for Public Procurement",543,"This Learning Review was the first comprehensive analysis of experiences with Integrity Pact implementation in over 20 countries over two decades.\n\nThe main findings confirm that Integrity Pacts:\n\n\n- Bring value as a corruption prevention mechanism in procurement, particularly in specific procurement processes;\n- Do not contribute to delays or add significant costs to procurement; but rather\n- Promote a level playing field among private sector competitors; and\n- Can contribute to cost savings and increased trust in public procurement.\n\n\nIt identifies the following key factors that contribute to an Integrity Pact’s success:\n\n\n- Political will of the contracting authority to use the Integrity Pact to its full extent to reduce corruption;\n- Maximum transparency at every step;\n- External independent monitoring to verify that Integrity Pact obligations are fulfilled;\n\n\n\n- Monitors with expertise in the relevant industry and anti-corruption compliance and integrity;\n- Including the monitor from the design phase of a tender through contract execution;\n- Effective communication channels between the monitor(s) and all parties to an Integrity Pact;\n- Defining a clear process for identification, reporting and escalation of potential integrity issues through dispute resolution or sanctions from the outset.\n\n\nFinally, it offers additional recommendations to improve the management and effectiveness of Integrity Pacts:\n\n\n- Tenders that apply Integrity Pacts should benefit from a thorough needs assessment and analysis of contextual corruption risks. This can set the baseline for an increased focus on data collection and monitoring and evaluation of the impact and benefits of using an Integrity Pact to monitor procurement.\n- Lessons learned from a one-off use of an Integrity Pact in a tender should be seized to promote systemic improvements and reforms to public procurement in each context.\n- Best practice sharing and on individual experiences with Integrity Pacts among anti-corruption and procurement experts should be enhanced.\n\n\nThe report applied a rigorous research methodology, canvassing nine review questions and gathering evidence from Integrity Pact practitioners and stakeholders through extensive desk research of relevant materials, a survey, interviews, and two on-site missions (in Mexico and India).\n\nLearn more about Integrity Pacts on the Basel Institute’s 2020 \u003Ca href=\"\u002Fnode\u002F1526\">Integrity Pact resource site\u003C\u002Fa>. Drawing on the 2015 Learning Review and new research and analysis, the online resource site aims to promote greater awareness and exchange of experiences for all stakeholders interested in implementing Integrity Pacts to monitor and improve public procurement.",[203,437],"Integrity Pacts",[60,171],"2015-01-01","https:\u002F\u002Fjam.baselgovernance.org\u002Fapi\u002Fassets\u002F539457f8-a0a6-4a1c-8b91-45abde84a739?width=600&height=840",[],[],[444],{"authors_id":445},{"id":446,"name":447},452,"Blomeyer and Sanz",[],[450,452],{"tags_id":451},{"id":131,"name":132},{"tags_id":453},{"id":235,"name":203},[455],2099,[203,437],[206],"2022-04-27T11:56:33.000Z","2026-05-31T22:51:48.000Z","\u002Fresources\u002Fpublications\u002Flearning-review-transparency-internationals-integrity-pacts-public-procurement",{"id":462,"slug":463,"title":464,"status":6,"nid":465,"year":199,"body":466,"external":19,"topic":467,"language":206,"type":468,"date_published":439,"image":469,"citation":14,"publisher":470,"link_internal":471,"link_external":472,"authors":473,"countries":482,"tags":483,"pdf":490,"topics":492,"featured":19,"languages":493,"summary":7,"programme":7,"area":7,"websites":7,"pdf_text":7,"sort":7,"user_created":75,"date_created":494,"user_updated":76,"date_updated":459,"main_points":7,"short_version":7,"subtitle":7,"link":495},2061,"strengthening-health-system-accountability-who-european-region-multi-country-study","Strengthening Health System Accountability: a WHO European Region Multi-Country Study",191,"This publication is the output of the latest collaborative project between the Basel Institute on Governance and the World Health Organisation Regional Office for Europe.\n\nThe document, which is co-edited by Juan Tello of WHO and Claudia Baez Camargo of the Basel Institute, offers a comprehensive view of the various manners in which different WHO member states have strived to improve their governance performance and specially throws light as to how different strategies to improve accountability have been rolled out responding to variations across institutional frameworks. ",[205],[60],"https:\u002F\u002Fjam.baselgovernance.org\u002Fapi\u002Fassets\u002F8ff1eef4-d271-4f86-b006-43de90655d08?width=600&height=840","World Health Organisation",[],[],[474,478],{"authors_id":475},{"id":476,"name":477},458,"Juan Tello",{"authors_id":479},{"id":480,"name":481},295,"Claudia Baez Camargo",[],[484,488],{"tags_id":485},{"id":486,"name":487},1381,"Health",{"tags_id":489},{"id":157,"name":158},[491],2110,[245],[206],"2022-04-27T11:56:36.000Z","\u002Fresources\u002Fpublications\u002Fstrengthening-health-system-accountability-who-european-region-multi-country-study",{"id":497,"slug":498,"title":499,"status":6,"nid":500,"year":167,"body":501,"external":19,"topic":502,"language":328,"type":503,"date_published":504,"image":505,"citation":506,"publisher":212,"link_internal":507,"link_external":509,"authors":510,"countries":517,"tags":530,"pdf":537,"topics":540,"featured":19,"languages":541,"summary":7,"programme":7,"area":7,"websites":7,"pdf_text":7,"sort":7,"user_created":75,"date_created":542,"user_updated":76,"date_updated":543,"main_points":7,"short_version":7,"subtitle":7,"link":544},1930,"working-paper-25-high-level-reporting-mechanisms-comparative-analysis","Working Paper 25: High Level Reporting Mechanisms: A comparative analysis",71,"This report discusses the different contexts and processes through which a High Level Reporting Mechanism (HLRM) has been designed and implemented in Colombia, Ukraine, Panama and Argentina, as well as initial interest in the HLRM model in Peru.\n\nIts aim is to understand the specificities of each case and draw lessons applicable to future projects in other countries, whilst respecting the commitment to develop an HLRM that takes account of the specific country’s context. \n\n### About this Working Paper\n\nThis paper is part of the Basel Institute on Governance Working Paper Series, \u003Ca href=\"\u002Fpublications?type[]=255\">ISSN: 2624-9650\u003C\u002Fa>.",[203,204],[208],"2018-09-01","https:\u002F\u002Fjam.baselgovernance.org\u002Fapi\u002Fassets\u002F90c8f53b-24df-49ff-ac23-639f7a16622a?width=600&height=840","Silva, V., Aiolfi, G. (2018). 'High Level Reporting Mechanisms: A comparative analysis'. Working Paper 25, Basel Institute on Governance",[508],{"url":215,"caption":216},[],[511,515],{"authors_id":512},{"id":513,"name":514},389,"Valeria Silva",{"authors_id":516},{"id":376,"name":377},[518,520,522,526,528],{"countries_id":519},{"id":226,"name":227},{"countries_id":521},{"id":230,"name":231},{"countries_id":523},{"id":524,"name":525},170,"Panama",{"countries_id":527},{"id":346,"name":347},{"countries_id":529},{"id":101,"name":102},[531,533,535],{"tags_id":532},{"id":235,"name":203},{"tags_id":534},{"id":131,"name":132},{"tags_id":536},{"id":238,"name":239},[538,539],1979,1980,[203,204],[206,15],"2022-04-27T11:55:05.000Z","2026-06-02T14:08:58.000Z","\u002Fresources\u002Fpublications\u002Fworking-paper-25-high-level-reporting-mechanisms-comparative-analysis",{"id":546,"slug":547,"title":548,"status":6,"nid":549,"year":550,"body":551,"external":19,"topic":552,"language":206,"type":553,"date_published":554,"image":555,"citation":14,"publisher":556,"link_internal":557,"link_external":561,"authors":565,"countries":570,"tags":571,"pdf":574,"topics":576,"featured":19,"languages":577,"summary":7,"programme":7,"area":7,"websites":7,"pdf_text":7,"sort":7,"user_created":75,"date_created":578,"user_updated":76,"date_updated":579,"main_points":7,"short_version":7,"subtitle":7,"link":580},2307,"guide-strengthening-internal-controls-prevent-corruption-illegal-wildlife-trade","Guide to strengthening internal controls to prevent corruption in illegal wildlife trade enforcement",2494,2023,"This how-to guide was developed for programme managers and donors who seek to understand and assess the strength of internal control functions in government agencies responsible for enforcing laws against illegal wildlife trade (IWT). \n\nIt provides detailed steps and guidance based on experience implementing assessments of internal controls, but a scan of the guide may also be helpful for conservation practitioners who want to understand more about how internal controls systems should work to reduce risks posed by corruption. Such an assessment can aid strategic efforts to enhance the integrity of government operations and to reduce the negative impact of corruption on the enforcement of IWT laws. \n\nThough this guide focuses on IWT, the same approach can be useful in other areas of natural resource management, such as forests and fisheries.\n\nIt was developed under the Basel Institute's \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fbaselgovernance.org\u002Fgreen-corruption\">Green Corruption programme\u003C\u002Fa> as part of a wider research collaboration between the Basel Institute and Targeting Natural Resource Corruption (\u003Ca href=\"http:\u002F\u002Ftnrcproject.org\u002F\">TNRC\u003C\u002Fa>) project consortium. \n\n### About the TNRC project\n\nThe TNRC project seeks to improve biodiversity conservation outcomes by helping practitioners to address the threats posed by corruption to wildlife, fisheries and forests. TNRC harnesses existing knowledge, generates new evidence, and supports innovative policy and practice for more effective anti-corruption programming on the ground.\n\nA USAID-funded project, TNRC is implemented by a consortium of leading organizations in anti-corruption, natural resource management, and conservation: World Wildlife Fund (WWF), the U4 Anti-Corruption Resource Centre at the Chr. Michelsen Institute, TRAFFIC, and the Terrorism, Transnational Crime and Corruption Center (TraCCC) at George Mason University.",[258],[171],"2023-08-03","https:\u002F\u002Fjam.baselgovernance.org\u002Fapi\u002Fassets\u002Fd66b3b59-37bd-4657-be13-b0c5556d9476?width=600&height=840","Targeting Natural Resource Corruption (TNRC) project",[558],{"url":559,"caption":560},"\u002Fresources\u002Fpublications\u002Finternal-controls-and-illegal-wildlife-trade-systemic-approach-corruption-prevention"," View related topic brief",[562],{"url":563,"caption":564},"https:\u002F\u002Fwww.worldwildlife.org\u002Fpages\u002Ftnrc-guide-how-to-guide-strengthening-internal-controls-to-prevent-corruption-in-illegal-wildlife-trade-enforcement","View on TNRC website",[566],{"authors_id":567},{"id":568,"name":569},353,"Rebecca Batts",[],[572],{"tags_id":573},{"id":131,"name":132},[575],2343,[258],[206],"2023-08-03T10:04:36.000Z","2026-06-02T14:08:40.000Z","\u002Fresources\u002Fpublications\u002Fguide-strengthening-internal-controls-prevent-corruption-illegal-wildlife-trade",1780676581551]