Transparency International
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Transparency International (TI) is a leading international non-governmental organization addressing corruption. This includes, but is not limited to, political corruption. It is widely known for producing its annual Corruptions Perceptions Index (see below), a comparative listing of corruption worldwide. The international headquarter is located in Berlin, Germany.
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[edit] Organization and role
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TI is organised as a group of some 100 national chapters, with an international secretariat in Berlin, Germany. Originally founded in Germany in 1993 as a not-for-profit organisation, TI is now an international non-governmental organisation, and claims to be moving towards a completely democratic organisational structure. TI says of itself:
- Transparency International is the global civil society organisation leading the fight against corruption. It brings people together in a powerful worldwide coalition to end the devastating impact of corruption on men, women and children around the world. TI's mission is to create change towards a world free of corruption."
It rejects any idea of "northern superiority" regarding corruption, and is committed to exposing corruption world-wide. Since 1995, TI has issued an annual Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI); it also publishes an annual Global Corruption Report, a Global Corruption Barometer and a Bribe Payers Index.
TI does not undertake investigations on single cases of corruption or expose individual cases. It develops tools for fighting corruption and works with other civil society organisations, companies and governments to implement them. The goal of TI is to be non-partisan and to build coalitions against corruption.
TI's biggest success has been to put the topic of corruption on the world's agenda. International Institutions such as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund now view corruption as one of the main obstacles for development, whereas prior to the 1990s this topic was not broadly discussed. TI furthermore played a vital role in the introduction of the United Nations Convention against Corruption and the OECD Anti-Bribery Convention.
[edit] Corruption Perceptions Index
The CPI - besides the World Bank corruption index - is today the most commonly-used measure for corruption in countries worldwide. Based on many different studies, it is known for its accuracy.[citation needed] To form this index, TI compiles surveys that ask businessmen and analysts, both in and outside the countries they are analyzing, their perceptions of how corrupt a country is. Relying on the number of actual corruption cases would not work since laws and enforcement of laws differ significantly from country to country.
The CPI is criticised for two main reasons. The first is a danger of a self-fulfilling prophecy. Country analysts might be influenced by past corruption indices and therefore not realise changes. Secondly, the use of the index values in time-series statistics is problematic due to the way it is calculated.
[edit] Bribe Payers Index
[edit] Competitiveness and corruption
A review of the linkages between countries' competitiveness and the incidence of corruption was initiated at a TI workshop in the International Anti-Corruption Conference in Prague, November 1998.
[edit] The German Transparency-Blog-Incident
In March 2006, TI Germany attempted to ban an article from a German Blog.[1] In this article the blogger expressed her disapproval about a friend’s dismissal who used to work at TI Germany, stating accusations that TI viewed as being false. This led some German bloggers to protest against TI’s alleged method of suppressing the freedom of opinion.
This reaction of the German blogosphere aroused media interest. After the blogger got some help from a German lawyer (who was also a blogger), TI Germany and the blogger came to an agreement. TI Germany never published a conclusive comment on this (a press release making some details on the monthly income of the affected employee was withdrawn very quickly[citation needed]).
[edit] See also
- Transparency (humanities)
- Nu Da Şpagă, TI campaign in Romania
- Bolje pakt nego rat, TI campaign in Croatia
- Huguette Labelle, chair of Transparency International since November 2005
- Garret FitzGerald, Board Member of Transparency International Ireland
- Boris Divjak, Global Board of Directors member and founder of the Bosnia and Herzegovina branch
- Frank Costigan, chair Transparency International Australia
[edit] External links
- Official site | TI's mission statement
- List of TI National Chapters
- TI's Global Corruption Report
- 'Lies' by Transparency International 'protect UK corruption' Indymedia UK article
- International Anti-Corruption Conference
- OurTrent.com - Advocating for transparency and accountability in governance at Trent University
- Article on corruption in Forbes (April 2007)
[edit] References
- ^ Blog: gedankenträger
bg:Прозрачност без граници cs:Transparency International da:Transparency International de:Transparency International eo:Travideblo Internacia et:Transparency International es:Transparencia Internacional fr:Transparency International gl:Transparencia Internacional id:Transparency International he:שבי"ל sw:Transparency International mg:Transparency International ms:Badan Ketelusan Antarabangsa nl:Transparency International no:Transparency International pl:Transparency International pt:Transparência Internacional ru:Трансперенси Интернешнл sk:Transparency International fi:Transparency International sv:Transparency International vi:Tổ chức Minh bạch Quốc tế tr:Uluslararası Saydamlık Örgütü zh:透明国际
Categories: Wikipedia articles needing style editing from December 2007 | All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements since February 2007 | Activism | Corruption | International nongovernmental organizations | Business ethics organizations | Non-profit organisations based in Germany | Non-governmental organizations

