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Anti-Corruption Law Program - "Anti-Corruption Technologies: Capabilities, Challenges, and Future Trends"

ACLP July 8th Event - final.png

Anti-Corruption Technologies: Capabilities, Challenges, and Future Trends

Thursday, July 8 | 9-11 am PDT | Webinar

Register for this Event

The ACLP continues its series of monthly webinars in 2021 that feature industry experts who share ideas and insight with their peers to help public and private sector policy makers combat corruption more effectively.

On July 8th at 9:00 am PDT, join our group of distinguished panelists as they discuss the pros, cons, and future outlook for technologies designed to detect, prevent, and mitigate corruption.

Selected discussion topics:

  • Can technology tell us if someone has taken a bribe? Tools that can identify money laundering, fraud, and related activities and have been in widespread use for many years, but can they determine if someone is involved in corruption?

  • What are the challenges we face? AI (artificial intelligence), OSINT (open source intelligence), big data analytics, blockchain, and other tools are rapidly transforming our due diligence and fraud/AML investigations, but how effectively are organizations and governments using these technologies to fight corruption?

  • Is this technology helping us win the fight against corruption? Organizations can now detect and prevent corruption earlier and better than ever. Machine learning apps, for example, can now assign a corruption probability to public officials. But how far are we from where we want to be? And how do we balance the human element?

  • What about GovTech (technologies designed to make the public sector more efficient) and promoting accountability through more accessible and useful data? Governments are slowly but increasingly automating their bureaucratic processes and public services, which has a direct effect on deterring corruption. Are governments in the USA, UK, and Canada leading or lagging in these efforts to combat corruption?

  • Where are we headed? There are plenty of opportunities ahead, but our expectations need to be reasonable. What about the automation bias, accountability, and protection risks of “human in the loop” oversight solutions.

This event qualifies for 2 CPD credits

Hosted by the Anti-Corruption Law Program, a collaborative partnership between the Centre for Business Law at the University of British Columbia Peter A. Allard School of Law, Transparency International Canada, and the International Centre for Criminal Reform & Criminal Justice Policy.