Procurement risks / Culture of compliance / NGO corruption

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COMMENTARY: Fraud and Corruption Risks in Procurement - A Thumbnail Sketch.  "Public procurement is the government activity perhaps most vulnerable to fraud and corruption.  Not only are the sums involved enormous, $9.5 trillion a year by one estimate, but at every point in the process decision-makers enjoy great discretion."
Rick Messick/Global Anticorruption Blog: https://globalanticorruptionblog.com/2016/06/15/fraud-and-corruption-risks-in-procurement-a-thumbnail-sketch/
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COMMENTARY: 5 Steps to an Anti-Corruption ‘Culture of Compliance’.  "While every company is different and each company has its own unique corporate culture, I believe that the most important element in developing a 'culture of compliance' is leadership that is strongly committed to doing business in an honest, ethical and legally compliant manner and which is willing to walk away from all business that does not meet that standard."
Howard Weismann/Global Compliance News: http://globalcompliancenews.com/5-steps-anti-corruption-culture-compliance-20160615/
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COMMENTARY: Corruption Among Development NGOs, Part 3–The Need for Collective Action by Funding Agencies.  "Previous posts on development NGO corruption described a survey tool and its results in Cambodia and the conundrum of using the upward accountability relationship between local NGOs (LNGOs) and the grantmakers funding them for remedial action. The analysis of the report which underlies much of those contributions includes another foundational premise: Given the systemic functioning of Cambodia’s (and other countries’) LNGO sectors, anticorruption action to hold these LNGOs to account needs to be collective in order to be effective."
Roger Henke/Global Anticorruption Blog: https://globalanticorruptionblog.com/2016/06/16/guest-post-corruption-among-development-ngos-part-3-the-need-for-collective-action-by-funding-agencies/

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