Performance reporting / Language watch / Internal auditors

Get AP-INTACT posts on Twitter (https://twitter.com/apintactnetwork)
If a link below does not work, please copy and paste the link into your browser’s address bar instead.


Government Public Performance Reporting - Is It Worth the Effort? (publication)   Public accountability demands that performance data be publicly available but who actually uses the vast amount of information that is produced and does it really improve the lives of citizens by enhancing government performance?

Jeff Tryens/Asian Development Bank: http://www.adb.org/publications/government-public-performance-reporting-it-worth-effort?utm_source=daily&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=alerts

Watch Your Language: Not “Everyone” Is Corrupt–Anywhere (commentary).  "I’ve noticed something about the way many people (including me) sometimes describe the severity of the corruption problem in many parts of the world: When calling attention to the problem of widespread, systemic corruption, it’s not uncommon to hear people say—usually in casual conversation, occasionally in more formal presentations—that in this or that country, or this or that government or department, “everyone” is corrupt, or “everybody” takes bribes, or similar."

Matthew Stephenson/Global Anticorruption Blog: https://globalanticorruptionblog.com/2016/08/23/watch-your-language-not-everyone-is-corrupt-anywhere/

Training for Internal Auditors in the Public Sector: An Alternative Approach for State Internal Auditors (publication).  Slovenia's program to standardize state internal auditor competencies through certification strives to merge international best practices with localized regulatory concerns.

Asian Development Bank: http://www.adb.org/publications/training-internal-auditors-public-sector?utm_source=daily&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=alerts

Popular posts from this blog

The Pacific - Nepal - Eastern Europe & Central Asia

Middle East & North Africa - Ukraine - Sri Lanka

Global - Sub-Saharan Africa - Turkey & Syria