Update, 22 April 2020: Since the publication of the letter, the number of signatories has grown from 54 to 92.Transparency International today joins over 90 other civil society groups and individual…
Transparency International fully supports a coalition of civil society organisations and journalists in Montenegro who, yesterday, called on their government to postpone a public debate on proposed…
A joint statement with Transparency International’s national chapters in Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Sweden
Together with its Estonian, Latvian, Lithuanian and Swedish national chapters, Transparency International today has sounded the alarm over the glaring flaws in European Union’s anti-money laundering…
Thirteen Latin American chapters from Transparency International highlight public procurement risks and how to mitigate them to benefit people
Today, a working group of 13 Latin American chapters of Transparency International presented a set of proposals to mitigate the risk of corruption in public procurement as part of the region’s…
More than 220 civil society organisations from around the world have voiced their concerns over the G20 civil society engagement process hosted by and in Saudi Arabia in 2020. The organisations have…
Transparency International U.S. recommends 25 anti-corruption measures to congressional leadership
With the U.S. Congress currently vetting a Coronavirus response package that could appropriate more than US$1 trillion, Transparency International U.S. today urged congressional leadership from both…
A joint statement from Amnesty International, CIVICUS and Transparency International
In the COVID-19 outbreak, the global community is facing one of the most challenging crises for decades. As of mid-March 2020 more than 250,000 people have been infected and over 10,000 people have…
Transparency International welcomes a recent decision by Portugal’s Central Court of Criminal Investigation to order the seizure of all assets held in the country by Isabel dos Santos, businesswoman…
When payments remain secret, the intended beneficiaries of a country’s natural resources – its citizens – are instead the first casualties of corruption.
Washington, D.C. – The U.S. office of Transparency International urges the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to revisit its proposed transparency rules for U.S. companies operating in the…
Issued by Transparency International Liaison Office to the European Union
The European Commission needs to strengthen mechanisms for preventing covert lobbying and regulatory capture, said Transparency International EU today, following new reports that detail how the…
Berlin, 5 March 2020 -- Transparency International, together with our Guatemalan chapter, Acción Ciudadana, urge the Constitutional Court of Guatemala to reject a series of Congressional amendments…
Study highlights signficant gaps in policy and research with little action in most countries
Berlin, 5 March 2020 – In advance of International Women’s Day on 8 March, a new report from Transparency International provides one of the most comprehensive overviews of sexual extortion or…
A statement from the U.S. office of Transparency International
Washington, D.C. – The U.S. Congress should pass the Foreign Extortion Prevention Act (FEPA), introduced in the House of Representatives last August, Transparency International said today.The bill…
Guatemala’s President Alejandro Giammattei should veto a set of unconstitutional amendments passed by congress on Wednesday that pose serious risks to Guatemala’s democracy and the rights of its…
A statement from the U.S. office of Transparency International
At its plenary meeting this week in Paris, the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) will decide whether to review its recommendations for regulating anonymous “shell companies” that are often used to…
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