The Communication Initiative Network

Where communication and media are central to social and economic development

GLOBAL| Approaches| Tools| Issues| Regions/Countries| MDGs| Polls / Discussions

E-magazines

Upcoming Events


Average Rating: no ratings submitted

Stealing the Future: Corruption in the Classroom

Author

Bettina Meier and Michael Griffin (eds.)

Publication Date

December 9 2005

Summary

This booklet by Transparency International (TI) addresses corruption in the education sector. It cites the need for instruments to curb corrupt practices to ensure that funds allocated are contributing to achieving goals in the current context of decentralisation, privatisation, globalisation, and diversification of educational services.

The organisation's approach to analysing situations and instruments for achieving transparency is the presentation of 10 studies carried out by TI Chapters in 2004 and 2005 in Argentina, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Brazil, Georgia, Mexico, Nepal, Nicaragua, Niger, Sierra Leone, and Zambia. The studies assess the forms and extent of corruption at schools, in universities, and in education administration, providing examples of how civil society can help curb corrupt practices in education.

The studies cover university level corruption, such as: nepotism and bribery in universities, irregularities in final examinations, and university-level corruption in gaining access to scholarships, transfers, study abroad opportunities, exam success, and professional positions and promotions. In the private sector, the booklet discusses textbook procurement and monitoring of construction contracts and maintenance procurement. On the topic of funds, it covers misuse of federal funding at the municipal level and misuse of donor-generated funding by nongovernmental organisations working on child labour issues.

For each issue of corruption, the booklet describes how chapters of TI in each location worked to develop instruments to respond. These include: agreements, stakeholder monitoring organisations, monitored certifications of suppliers, parent/community involvement, internal audits, laboratory testing, standardised selection criteria, increased supervision, awareness raising, and exam monitoring among others.

The following are some conclusions resulting from the case studies:
  • Teachers play a crucial role, which is negatively affected by salary problems.
  • Community participation increases ownership and adds valuable stakeholder management.
  • Awareness of existing legislation and enforcement of visible sanctions can be effective.
  • Impartial monitoring can benefit students, professors, administrators, contractors, and civil society as a whole with the concept of a level playing field.

Number of Pages

88

Contact

Bettina Meier
Transparency International (TI)
Alt Moabit 96
10559 Berlin
Germany
Tel: 49 30 34 38 20-0
Fax: 49 30 34 70 39 12
bmeier@transparency.org
Transparency International website

Source

Email to The Communication Initiative from Bettina Meier
on January 16 2007 and the

Transparency International website.


Placed on the Communication Initiative site March 05 2007
Last Updated March 05 2007

How useful did you find this page to your work?

1 - not useful    5 - very useful

Feel free to leave us comments

CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.

Help Seed The CI Network

Login / Register

Subscribe to The Drum Beat, Contribute to Forums, Get Poll Results etc
New to CI? » Start here

Development Classifieds

Culturally Effective Strategies

If culturally delicate HIV/AIDS factors such as male circumcision or fewer multiple concurrent partners are to be effectively addressed, which communication strategies are most required? [choose a maximum of 3]