Countries Doing Battle with Corruption - 5 Valuable Lessons from Asia-Pacific

Tuesday, 9 December 2014 -- On International Anti-Corruption Day, the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) in Bangkok launches a milestone study on how Asia-Pacific combats government corruption.

Anti-Corruption Strategies: Understanding What Works, What Doesn't, and Why? (Lessons Learned from the Asia-Pacific Region) is based on the experiences of 14 countries—Afghanistan, Australia, Bhutan, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Maldives, Mongolia, Nepal, Pakistan, Philippines, Papua New Guinea, Thailand, and Vietnam.

The study draws out 5 valuable lessons that can guide a country's anti-corruption efforts:

1) Political changes are an opportunity and a challenge for the sustainability of anti-corruption strategies.
2) Measuring corruption is important, but only if governments make actual use of measurement results.
3) Regular data collection is an integral component of an anti-corruption strategy.
4) An anti-corruption agency is only as effective as the level of political support it enjoys from different branches of government.
5) Anti-corruption agencies in the region remain weak in monitoring and evaluating their strategies.

You can download a free PDF copy (1.4MB) of the study by visiting http://asia-pacific.undp.org/content/rbap/en/home/library/democratic_governance/anti-corruption-strategies.html

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