International Council on Human RightsTransparency International2019-09-252019-09-252011-03-3120092940259852http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/177314Yet corruption clearly remains a challenge. Despite countless policy diagnoses, public campaigns to raise awareness, and institutional and legal reforms to improve public administration, research shows that it continues to flourish. Indeed, opinion polls suggest that the public is more pessimistic than before about the likelihood of eliminating it. Combating corruption requires strong collective efforts from different sectors in society acting in co-ordinated ways. The aim of this report is to encourage and assist individuals and institutions which work to promote and protect human rights to engage with corruption issues and collaborate more closely with anti-corruption organisations. It may also assist those who combat corruption to recognise the value of human rights to their work and the advantages of closer collaboration with human rights organisations. In addition, the report may help to raise awareness among key stakeholders and the public of the links between corruption and human rights, thereby diminishing public tolerance of corruption and strengthening public support for anticorruption measures. It suggests some additional tools that individuals can use to denounce corruption as well as to protect those who combat it.Pages: 101engWith permission of the license/copyright holderhuman rightscorruptionPolitical ethicsCommunity ethicsCorruption and human rightsBook