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Editors

Harry Cassin
Publisher and Editor

Andy Spalding
Senior Editor

Jessica Tillipman
Senior Editor

Bill Steinman
Senior Editor

Richard L. Cassin
Editor at Large

Elizabeth K. Spahn
Editor Emeritus

Cody Worthington
Contributing Editor

Julie DiMauro
Contributing Editor

Thomas Fox
Contributing Editor

Marc Alain Bohn
Contributing Editor

Bill Waite
Contributing Editor

Shruti J. Shah
Contributing Editor

Russell A. Stamets
Contributing Editor

Richard Bistrong
Contributing Editor

Eric Carlson
Contributing Editor

Search Results for:  – Page 31

The U.S. has a chance to target demand-side bribery with the CROOK Act

Companies have long complained, rightly, that they bear the brunt of most anti-bribery efforts. Bribes are, at their simplest, transactions between two parties, but companies are prosecuted aggressively while the misconduct by grasping government officials typically escapes notice, or at least prosecution. At the same time, those who live in corrupt nations are increasingly chafing […]

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Inside view: What do corrupt organizations look like?

The concept of corporate culture — generally defined as “the way we do things around here” — isn’t a rigid paper process. It’s hard to measure, which explains why corporate culture has been largely neglected by regulators and the anti-corruption-consulting industry.

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Voices From Africa

Marc Ona Essangui is from Gabon — a West African country with lots of oil, about a million and a half people, and just two presidents since independence from France in 1960. He’s the local head of the Publish What You Pay coalition, an NGO operating in 70 countries “that helps citizens of resource-rich developing […]

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Collective Action: A new approach to combat corruption (Part Five)

As we saw last week, there’s a perception that voluntary anti-corruption declarations are too weak to have any significant impact on preventing corruption. While it’s true that declarations have more of the “collective” than the “action,” they are still an important step in the fight against corruption, especially when combined with the awareness-raising activities which usually accompany them. 

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The Husband-And-Wife Thing

Married couples have made up more than 10% of the FCPA-related criminal defendants since December 2007, when Gerald and Patricia Green were indicted. Before then, there hadn’t been any husband-and-wife FCPA defendants.

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