Transparency International and the Institute of Chartered Accountants of England and Wales are launching The Transparency International Framework for Assurance of Corporate Anti-bribery Programmes
Date & Time: 21st June 2012 08:30-10:30
Location: Chartered Accountants' Hall, Moorgate Place, London, EC2R 6EA, United Kingdom
Transparency International and the Institute of Chartered Accountants of England and Wales are pleased to invite you to the launch on 21st June 2012 of 'The Transparency International Framework for Assurance of Corporate Anti-bribery Programmes'
9.00 to 10:30 am at the Chartered Accountants' Hall Moorgate Place London EC2R 6EA
Continental breakfast will be available from 8.30 am.
There will be panel presentations followed by discussion with the audience.
Good practice now demands that enterprises develop comprehensive programmes to counter bribery that are monitored and improved on a continual basis. Moreover enterprises are increasingly expected to communicate to their stakeholders, internally and externally, the measures and efforts they are deploying to counter and detect bribery. The Assurance Framework aims to encourage the use of independent assurance as a means to strengthen corporate anti-bribery programmes and lend greater credibility to the efforts of enterprises to prevent bribery and corruption. The Assurance Framework was developed with enterprises in mind but should also be of help to assurance practitioners by providing criteria that may eventually become generally accepted for use in anti-bribery assurance engagements.
The Assurance Framework is the latest addition to a range of Transparency International tools based on the Business Principles for Countering Bribery and developed to raise the level of corporate anti-bribery practice.
The Framework was developed by Transparency International with the support of the World Economic Forum Partnering Against Corruption Initiative (PACI). The Framework underwent a four-month public consultation and incorporates feedback from this consultation.
Susan Côté-Freeman
Private Sector Programmes
Transparency International