On International Anti-Corruption Day (December 9), three panels will explore corruption studies, anti-corruption efforts, and their impacts RESPOND invites you to the online event “Advances in Anti-Corruption: Current Trends and Future Perspectives”. Co-organized with the BIT-ACT (Bottom-Up Initiatives and Anti-Corruption Technologies research project, the event will be held online on the International Anti-Corruption Day –…
RESPOND has marked its first publication with a chapter in the newly released Handbook of Comparative Political Institutions (Edward Elgar). Titled “Political Institutions and the Corruption of Politics”, the chapter and soon available as Open Access, the chapter introduces RESPOND’s analytical framework designed to assess corruption within political institutions. This framework provides insights into the dynamic interactions between different types…
📅 November 8, 2024📍 University of Bologna (Italy) Our very first event in the RESPOND Seminar Series was a success! We had the privilege of hosting David Jancsics, Professor at San Diego State University, who brought his incredible expertise to the table. The author of the newly released book Sociology of Corruption, gave an eye-opening…
RESPOND Seminar Serieswith David Jancsics, Professor at San Diego State University Aula Romei (Via dei Bersaglieri 6c, Bologna) e Zoom (Join Zoom Meetinghttps://unibo.zoom.us/j/89146840132 ) What fostered corruption in Hungary? What are the most typical forms of corruption in this country? What do Hungarians think about it? What is the role of prime minister Viktor Orbán in this? …
On the occasion of the 7th anniversary of Daphne Caruana Galizia’s murder, CHANCE partners convened in Malta for a collaborative event. This meeting was part of the activities under the Youth in Connection project, funded by European Commission, aiming to foster synergies and advance joint initiatives. The event brought together civil society organizations, journalists, and…
The increasingly fractious global geopolitical landscape has severely disrupted the EU integration reform agendas for good governance in the Western Balkans. The lack of a unified European geopolitical will and instruments has allowed Moscow and Beijing to build considerable inroads in the region, cementing state capture networks and emboldening autocrats and kleptocrats to foil anticorruption…