2 research outputs found
Global Corruption Baromoter Latin America & The Caribbean 2019: Citizens\u27 Views and Experiences of Corruption
In the last five years, momentum has been building against corruption in Latin America and the Caribbean. High-level politicians were found guilty of corruption in Guatemala and Brazil, and a wave of legal action against the perpetrators of grand corruption swept across the continent, including the Lava Jato investigation, or “Operation Car Wash”, in Brazil. This presents a real opportunity for anti-corruption in the region. However, this 10th edition of the Global Corruption Barometer – Latin America and the Caribbean shows that most citizens think their governments are not doing enough to tackle corruption and that corruption levels have increased in the past 12 months across the region
Connecting the dots: Building the case for open data to fight corruption
This research, published with Transparency International, measures the progress made by five key countries in implementing the G20 Anti-Corruption Open Data Principles.
These principles, adopted by G20 countries in 2015, committed countries to increasing and improving the publication of public information, driving forward open data as a tool in anti-corruption efforts.
However, this research – looking at Brazil, France, Germany, Indonesia and South Africa – finds a disappointing lack of progress. No country studied has released all the datasets identified as being key to anti-corruption and much of the information is hard to find and hard use.
Key findings:
No country released all anti-corruption datasets
Quality issues means data is often not useful or useable
Much of the data is not published in line with open data standards, making comparability difficult
In many countries there is a lack of open data skills among officials in charge of anti-corruption initiatives
Access the individual country case studies on the Web Foundation\u27s website