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Prevention of illicit financial flows

Introduction 

Financing the MDGs and poverty reduction has been recognized as one of the most significant challenges to achieving progress. Two major limitations have been observed when dealing with this challenge. First, corruption and poor governance persist as major bottlenecks for the achievement of the MDGs due to the amount of resources lost through corruption. It is now widely recognized that illicit financial flows (IFFs) represent a considerable drain on financial resources from developing countries. Every year the developing world loses as much as US$1 trillion in illicit outflows through government corruption, criminal activity, and commercial tax evasion (Global Financial Integrity, 2012).

The second major limitation is that the usual approach towards IFFs has been either taxation-centric (dealing from a standard economic solution to the problem) or asset-recovery centric (such as global anti-corruption discourse and UNCAC). There has not yet been a comprehensive approach to strengthen national capacities in preventing IFFs, such as strengthening both taxation and monitoring and oversight mechanisms. Curtailing illicit capital outflows has the potential to unlock billions of much needed dollars for MDG-related expenditures, including in countries that are considerably off track in their goal achievements. 

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Themes,

Climate change & Natural resource management

Responding to the effects of climate change and the mismanagement of natural resources has direct and significant consequences for poverty reduction and sustainable human development. In an effort to mitigate the negative impacts, substantial amounts of funds have been pledged and directed for climate change adaptation and mitigation measures. Similarly, the number of countries relying on extracting resources has been increasing, partly driven by high demand and prices for commodities. The extent to which climate finances or revenues from the extractive sector positively contribute to sustainable human development depends on the extent to which the money is spent for the intended purposes, without corruption and leakage. Besides the effectiveness and efficiency argument, corruption also exacerbates negative externalities in the environment and natural resource sector by distorting incentives and eroding the stringency of environmental regulations. Mitigating the risk of corruption in climate change finance, therefore, remains one of the priority areas.
Reducing emissions from the global forest sector has an important role to play in both mitigation and adaptation. The United Nations’ Collaborative programme to Reduce Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (UN REDD Programme) assists developing countries in building capacity to reduce emissions and participate in a future REDD+ mechanism under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).
Natural resources can be a major source of revenue and opportunities for a country to foster its sustainable economic and social development and achieve internationally agreed development goals, including the MDG’s.
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Themes,

Anti-corruption in post-conflict and transition countries

Introduction 

Addressing corruption in post-conflict and transition contexts is one of the major priorities for development actors. One in four people in the world are affected by conflict. Corruption is identified as a major factor in derailing political and economic transitions, undermining state capacity and legitimacy, exacerbating poverty and fueling grievances linked to conflict. Often in such contexts, the immediate focus on peace building and state-building comes at the expense of promoting integrity, transparency and accountability in the governance process. Lack of emphasis on transparency and accountability in state-building processes could create opportunities for corruption and limit gains possible from peace.


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Themes,

Anti-corruption & women’s empowerment

 

Introduction 

Corruption is not gender neutral; it has different impacts on both women and men. Considering that women often face social, cultural, political and institutional discrimination, they encounter even more repression and social exclusion in a corruption-ridden society. Therefore, anti-corruption measures need to be gender responsive to facilitate gender equality and women’s empowerment. Recent studies have showed that empowered women, who have an opportunity for participation in decision-making, are powerful actors that can contribute to the fight against corruption.


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Themes,

UNCAC implementation & review mechanism

The United Nations Convention Against Corruption (UNCAC or the Convention) was adopted by the UN General Assembly resolution 58/4 of 31 October 2003 and entered into force on 14 December 2005. It is the first global agreement on measures against corruption, which legally binds States Parties, on an equal footing to implement the convention. 
UNCAC is a global standard for fighting corruption and corruption risk mitigation. It encompasses a comprehensive collection of measures and approaches to prevent and combat corruption.  The almost universal adoption of UNCAC by State Parties has confirmed not only that corruption is a globally recognised problem across developed as well as developing countries, but also that Member States are placing anti-corruption firmly on their agendas. UNCAC substantive content is clustered in six main chapters including: prevention, criminalization, law enforcement, international cooperation, asset recovery and technical assistance.

The Mechanism for the Review of Implementation of the United Nations Convention against Corruption was adopted at the third session of the Conference of State Parties (CoSP) to the UNCAC, held in Doha from 9-13 November 2009, as a body or mechanism to assist the State Parties in the effective implementation of the convention.   

 

The fight against corruption requires systemic and rigorous reforms undertaken after thorough analysis and research about how public institutions function in particular settings. It also requires them to be open, transparent and accountable to the public. Therefore anti-corruption efforts often demand political commitment as well as a sustained approach.

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During the 3rd Conference of the States Parties (2009) in its resolution 3/1, based on Article 63 of the Convention, a review mechanism was established. The implementation review is an inter-governmental peer-monitoring process whereby each state party is reviewed by two peers.