Title: Using Diplomacy to Integrate Anticorruption and
1US Department of State
- Using Diplomacy to Integrate Anticorruption and
- Corporate Governance
- John Brandolino
- Director for Anticorruption
- Governance Initiatives
- U.S. Department of State
2Fighting Corruption is a Foreign Policy Priority
for the U.S. Government President Bush The
United States is committed to bringing renewed
energy to the global anticorruption agenda, and
to increasing the effectiveness of the American
policies and programs that address this important
issue. Secretary Powell Committed to
fostering new synergies in the fight against
corruption that promote integrity and confidence
in both government institutions and in the global
marketplace. Recognizes that success also
requires leadership by the private sector...
US Department of State
3US Department of State
- U.S. Anticorruption Policy Goals of the Past
Several Years - Enhance recognition of corruptions international
implications - Establish internationally-accepted anticorruption
norms and commitments - Encourage cooperation and mutual evaluation among
governments to implement commitments
4US Department of State
- TEN YEARS AGO
- - Corruption was loosely discussed among
governments - - No international anticorruption agreements
- --------------------------------------------------
----------------------------- - TODAY
- - All governments discuss and denounce corruption
- 143 governments attended Second Global Forum
- - At least 7 regional international agreements
and one global convention currently being
negotiated at the United Nations - Europe COE, SPAI, OECD Anti-bribery
5US Department of State
- ANTICORRUPTION CONVENTIONS AND AGREEMENTS
- Different from traditional conventions
criminalizing behavior - Contain commitments by governments to enhance
good governance - RECENT US GOALS
- Good governance and institution building must go
beyond the public sector - Ensure good governance commitments by governments
recognize and include commitments to enhance
corporate good governance
6- SURVEY OF EXISTING INTERNATIONAL AGREEMENTS
- The most cited governance commitment is a
corporate governance measure - Governance commitments (known as preventive
measures) fall within four general categories
7US Department of State
- (1) Integrity of Public Service
- (compensation/pension/benefits, hiring,
promotion, standards of conduct, training,
rotation of assignments, financial disclosure) - (2) Integrity of Public Budgeting, Procurement,
- and Decisionmaking
- (clear delegation, independent oversight-
investigative- prosecutorial institutions and
processes, judicial review, limiting interface,
eliminating favorable tax treatment)
8US Department of State
- (3) Empowering Civil Society
- (public awareness and research, protection of
whistleblowers, protection of victims, formal
mechanisms for private/public cooperation, public
access to government information, transparency of
election activities) - (4) Corporate Integrity
- (books and records, disqualification of corrupt
legal persons and natural persons, standards and
codes, protection of shareholder rights)
9US Department of State
- Where to go from here?
- U.S. Integrate Corporate Governance into
International Initiatives (e.g. State/USAID
Working Group, Funding for IFIs) - Ensure Integration of Corporate Governance
Commitments into the New UN Anticorruption
Convention - Governments Work Together Cooperatively and
Constructively to Implement Anticorruption
Commitments - Private Sector and Civil Society Participate as
Hammers and Examples