International Anti-Corruption Conference

The International Anti-Corruption Conference (IACC) is a series of international conferences organised by the IACC Council, in association with local governments and organisations, with Transparency International as its secretariat.[1] The conference was first held in 1983[2] in Washington D.C.,and the New York City Department of Investigation and has since been held every two years in a different country.

The 17th IACC was held in Panama City in December 2016, based on the theme "Time for Justice, Equity, Security and Trust".[3]

IACC has developed a number of global initiatives that run independently of the conference, such as Young Journalist Initiative, Social Entrepreneurs for Transparency, Journalists 4 Transparency, anti-corruption film festival, and the Fair Play music Anti-corruption competition.

Host cities

The table below shows the location of each IACC since the conference was first held in 1983.[4]

YearLocation
1983Washington D.C.
1985New York City
1987Hong Kong
1989Sydney
1992Amsterdam
1993Cancun
1995Beijing
1997Lima
1999Durban
2001Prague
2003Seoul
2006Guatemala City
2008Athens
2010Bangkok
2012Brasilia
2015Putrajaya
2016Panama City
2018Copenhagen
2020Seoul

[4]

14th IACC

The 14th IACC was held In Bangkok between 10 and 13 November 2010[5] with the theme “Restoring trust: Global action for transparency”.[6] The conference was hosted jointly by the IACC Council, the National Anti-Corruption Commission, The Royal Thai Ministry of Justice and Transparency Thailand.[7] Delegates from over 130 countries were present at the conference,[5] which was also attended by the Prime Minister of Thailand Abhisit Vejjajiva, World Bank Managing Director Sri Mulyani Indrawati, Asian Development Bank President Haruhiko Kuroda and Transparency International chair Huguette Labelle.[7]

The conference featured 40 workshop sessions structured around four identified global challenges:[6]

  • Restoring Trust for Peace and Security
  • Fuelling Transparency and Accountability in the Natural Resources and Energy Markets
  • Climate Governance: Ensuring a Collective Commitment
  • Strengthening Global Action for an Accountable Corporate World

The conference concluded as all attending nations pledged to increase the intensity of anti-corruption initiatives, and to fully honour all existing anti-corruption agreements.[8]

15th IACC

The 15th IACC was held in Brasilia between 7 and 10 November 2012, with the theme "Mobilising people: connecting agents of change".[3] The conference was organised by the IACC Council, with Transparency International as the secretariat and in association with the Brazilian Office of the Comptroller General (OCG), AMARRIBO Brazil and Instituto Ethos.

16th IACC

The 16th IACC was held in Putraya between 2 and 4 September 2015, with the theme "Ending Impunity: People, Integrity, Action".[9] The Conference was organised by the IACC Council, with Transparency International as the Secretariat in association with the Malaysian Anti-corruption Commission.[10]

17th IACC

The 17th IACC took place in Panama City between 1–4 December 2016, with the theme "Time for Justice, Equity, Security and Trust", The Conference was organised by the IACC Council, with Transparency International as the Secretariat in association with National authority for Transparency and access to Information ANTAI and TI National Chapter in Panama. The four-day conference was packed with opportunities for anti-corruption activists and experts to exchange, learn and enjoy through workshops and panels, film screenings, plenaries, an evening networking events and an outdoor concert, the Fair Play Anti-corruption Music.[11]

The conference featured 60 workshop sessions structured around four identified global challenges:

  • Panama Papers
  • Strong, resilient & ethical institutions
  • Shielding Justice, Financial Integrity
  • People fighting Grand Corruption

18th IACC

The 18th IACC was held in Copenhagen, Denmark on 22–24 October 2018.[12]

19th IACC

The 19th IACC will be held in Seoul, Korea on 2–5 June 2020.

gollark: Maybe I can just do ri2 - constant, that makes some sense.
gollark: `ADD` is `04 [register 1][register 2] [16-bit constant] - save (constant + ri2) to ri1`, but for subtraction the order is actually a problem.
gollark: Hmm, I'm not sure how the subtraction thing should work because it's not commutative like addition.
gollark: The current implementation can do loops and branching, at least.
gollark: (not actually assembly, not actually implemented yet, does not support negative numbers, 64KiB of memory only)

See also

References

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