The Chandler Papers are written by the members of The Chandler Sessions on Integrity and Corruption, a group brought together by the Blavatnik School of Government to focus on issues of corruption worldwide and to analyse current practices employed to root out corruption, the tools available to penalise wrongdoers and the indicators used to measure corruption.
The Chandler Papers: Remediation agreements for corporate corruption
In this new Chandler Sessions paper, Kathleen Roussel, Todd Foglesong and Tom Andreopoulos analyse the Canadian experience and outline a strategy for managing the challenges of remediation agreements.
The Chandler Papers: Sexual corruption
Failure to successfully implement anti-corruption reforms can sometimes be traced to a lack of understanding of the fundamentally different nature of different forms of corruption. This paper illustrates this problem by exploring a form of corruption that has been notoriously difficult to define and measure, and that thereby in many cases falls under the radar of anti- corruption policy and practice: sexual corruption.