Anti-Corruption Working Group
Anti-Corruption Working Group
The AS/COA Anti-Corruption Working Group (AWG) is an action-oriented network focused on producing concrete results and contributing to the reduction of corruption in Latin America. The AWG navigates Latin America’s evolving anti-corruption movement by convening the region’s top corruption fighters and corporate leaders who are determined to see the historic crackdown on graft continue.
The AWG is open to and currently includes AS/COA corporate, Chairman’s International Advisory Council, Board of Directors, and President’s Circle members.
The AWG is funded by corporate members and foundations. AS/COA retains full editorial and content independence regarding all programming activities, research, advisory board membership and materials associated with the AWG.
The Lava Jato investigation is an opportunity to prove that the rule of law is spreading in Brazil - and the region.
Will the investigation of corruption at Petrobras lead to a better Brazil? Or will it collapse because of recent mistakes? An in-depth look by AQ’s editor-in-chief.
Efforts to promote transparency and accountability could help solidify recent gains in the fight against corruption.
Corruption is not inevitable. Companies, public officials and private citizens can work together to fight it, the judge writes.
A change at the Justice Ministry triggers concerns over political interference in the Petrobras probe.
AS/COA and the risk consulting firm Control Risks present the inaugural edition of the Capacity to Combat Corruption (CCC) Index, a tool to assess Latin America’s ability to uncover, punish, and deter corruption.
AS/COA’s Anticorruption Working Group convened a meeting of senior private sector leaders to discuss practical steps to reduce corruption in the region.
This report explores the current, critical moment in the region’s fight against graft, and suggests eight strategies for building upon recent progress.
The Christian Science Monitor cites AS/COA's and Controls Risks' CCC Index in its latest editorial about Puerto Rico.
NTN24.com destaca que Venezuela obtuvo el peor de los resultados en el Índice de Capacidad para Combatir la Corrupción (CCC).
"¿Cuántas posibilidades de sacar a la luz, detener y castigar la corrupción tenemos los mexicanos? Cuidado, los números dicen mucho, para bien y para mal", dice Gabriel Bauducco en El Heraldo de México sobre el índice CCC de AS/COA y Control Risks.
“O Brasil conseguiu desenvolver instrumentos sofisticados contra a corrupção, mas tem sistemas políticos muito deficientes”, diz Roberto Simon, diretor-sênior de políticas da AS/COA, sobre o novo Índice Capacidade para Combater Corrupção de AS/COA e Control Risks.
“Para los que toman decisiones de inversión, conocer los riesgos de corrupción e integridad en la jurisdicción es un factor crucial", señaló Geert Albers sobre el nuevo índice Capacidad para Combatir la Corrupción de AS/COA y Control Risks.
El Comercio habla sobre la posición que ocupa Perú en el nuevo índice Capacidad para Combatir la Corrupción de AS/COA y Control Risks.
Infobae destaca el nuevo índice Capacidad para Combatir la Corrupción de AS/COA y Control Risks, el cual clasificó a México con un puntaje global de 4.65 de 10.
México se encuentra entre los países latinoamericanos peor calificados para el combate a la corrupción, de acuerdo con el más nuevo ranking de AS/COA y Control Risks.
Sin Embargo destaca el nuevo Índice CCC de AS/COA y Control Risks, donde se clasifica a ocho países de América Latina según su capacidad para combatir la corrupción.
"La Argentina se está desempeñando realmente mal en la cooperación internacional", señaló Roberto Simon, Director Senior de Políticas Públicas de AS/COA sobre el nuevo índice Capacidad para Combatir la Corrupción en La Nación.