Keeping Business Clean: Anti-Corruption Actions for the Private Sector
Join us in Vancouver on November 27 for an insightful discussion with key business leaders and experts on the critical role of the private sector in combatting corruption.
Bad governance that too often causes forced displacement is almost always associated with corruption. Grand corruption weakens and distracts governments, making it less likely that they will meet their responsibility to protect their own population. And the theft of international aid discourages donors, compounding the difficulty in funding efforts to assist refugees and the internally displaced.
The World Refugee & Migration Council (WRMC) addressed the scourge of corruption in Un llamado a la acción: Transformar el sistema global de refugio, stressing accountability and proposing that when stolen funds are found offshore, they ought not only to be frozen but also confiscated and re-purposed for the benefit of the displaced, as Canada has now done under its Special Economic Measures Act. That legislation is based on the proposed Frozen Assets Repurposing Act advanced by the WRMC with the Hon. Ratna Omidvar.
The Task Force has three key priorities:
Join us in Vancouver on November 27 for an insightful discussion with key business leaders and experts on the critical role of the private sector in combatting corruption.
Peter German Canadian Task Force Against Global Construction Download the Action Plan: The pace of life, and crime, have accelerated exponentially in recent years. As technology races ahead, enabling globalization of both trade and transportation, so does the threat environment and the need to mitigate those threats to the greatest extent possible. The
A Working Paper from the North and Central American Task Force on Migration In this report, we wish to highlight the importance of increasing public security by strengthening the fight against organized crime, other criminal groups, and corrupt officials who are increasingly critical players in the migration equation. We believe that a
The World Refugee & Migration Council along with the American Academy of Arts and Sciences have published an important new book analyzing the nature, causes, and consequences of grand corruption, showing how it can be assessed, measured, and attacked from within and without. The book is edited by Robert I Rotberg and Fen
The World Refugee & Migration Council (WRMC) welcomes the decision of the G7 to extend a 50 billion dollar loan to Ukraine, which will be underwritten by the earnings of Russian assets that have been frozen by G7 countries and the European Union.
Instead of confiscating Russian assets, Western governments can use them as security for loans of equal value immediately to support Ukraine.
Write us at info@wrmcouncil.org with inquiries or to receive updates about the work of the Task Force.
Chair, World Refugee & Migration Council
Viscount Bennett Professor of Law, Schulich School of Law, Dalhousie University
Schulich School of Law, Dalhousie University
President, International Centre for Criminal Law Reform, Allard School of Law, University of British Columbia
Global Governance Forum and Convenor of the Climate Governance Commission
President, World Refugee & Migration Council and Chancellor’s Professor, Carleton University
Founder and Executive Director, Mindset Foundation and Founder and CEO, Mindset Venture Group
Integrity Initiatives International (observer)
Former Attorney General of Canada and Minister of Justice and Foreign Affairs
Former Canadian Senator and president of York and Wilfrid Laurier Universities
Ambassador (Ret.)
Human Rights and Migration Advocate
Former President of the International Development Research Centre
Counsel to Justice Canada, Lawyer and Criminologist (Ret.)
CEO & Founder, Angus Reid Global
Former Attorney General of Canada and Minister of Justice
Member of the Board, Integrity Initiatives International
Director of Public Affairs, World Refugee & Migration Council
Integrity Initiatives International and Senior United States District Judge (ex officio)