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.
A bill in the U.S. Congress may create a special fund to support anti-corruption worldwide. What’s at stake for the region?
The politician who most benefited from Brazil's anti-corruption probe has put the final nail in its coffin.
A vote to strip privilege from lawmakers could actually further shield them from corruption charges.
Economy and geography helped the country top the CCC Index. But the key is politics.
The new CCC Index shows an anti-corruption wave receding as COVID-19 hits the region.
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.
Reforma destaca el nuevo índice CCC de AS/COA y Control Risks, en el que México está entre los países de América Latina con menor capacidad para combatir la corrupción.
“Chile tuvo casos importantes de corrupción, como Penta, SQM y Caval, pero no se comparan con la trama de corrupción de Odebrecht en varios países de la región ni con Lava Jato en Brasil”, asevera Roberto Simon, Director Senior de Políticas Públicas de AS/COA.
“Una oleada anticorrupción ha arrasado América Latina en los últimos cinco años. El Índice CCC nos da una herramienta comparativa para entender mejor este fenómeno”, señaló Roberto Simon, Director Senior de Políticas Públicas de AS/COA.
"There has been a failure to reform the political system where corruption remains endemic," said AS/COA's Roberto Simon about Brazil and its position in the CCC Index.
Rather than measuring perceived levels of corruption, the CCC Index evaluates and ranks countries based on how effectively they are able to combat corruption.
Más que medir los niveles de percepción de corrupción, el Índice CCC evalúa y clasifica a los países basándose en cómo éstos efectivamente son capaces de combatir la corrupción.
Em vez de analisar os níveis de percepção da corrupção, o CCC Index avalia e classifica países de acordo com sua capacidade de combater a corrupção.