Cuando la corrupción nos toca

A session on corruption victims, Cuando la corrupción nos toca: participación de víctimas y organizaciones de la sociedad civil en la lucha contra la corrupción, will be held in connection with the 194th Period of Sessions of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights. 

The session will examine how corruption directly impacts individuals and communities and will highlight the role that victims and civil society organizations can play in advancing justice and promoting comprehensive reparations. Featuring leading experts from across the Latin American region, the discussion will focus on the opportunities and challenges involved in participating in judicial processes related to corruption with human rights implications. 

The event will take place on November 19, 2025, in hybrid format in Spanish from the University of Miami. Register here.

The Failure to Limit the Corruption of Global Capital

This past April I was fortunate enough to attend a wide-ranging discussion at the Stanford Business School of what the growing power of global capital and the declining trust in government institutions means for the future of capitalism and democracy.

Not surprisingly corruption emerged as a major theme.

Speakers examined everything from the failure of multinational corporations to enforce their own ethics codes to the rise of a profession devoted to helping corrupt officials hide stolen assets to the OCED’s failure to crack down on Italy’s breach of the Antibribery Convention.

A link to the conference papers is here. My summary of what was said about the transnational spread of corruption and measures to curb it, published on the ProMarket page of the University of Chicago’s Stigler Center, is here.

An extraordinary app, NotebookLM, converted the summary into a dialogue explaining the summary and exploring its implications.  It is here.( A physicist friend had raved about how NotebookLM made his technical papers understandable to lay audiences. I didn’t believe him until I heard the dialogue it created off the summary. I am astonished at the result.) 

Georgia at the Crossroads: The MEGOBARI Act As a Rule-of-Law Lifeline

GAB welcomes this post by Giorgi Meladze, Associate Professor at Ilia State University School of Law in Tbilisi and an invited lecturer at European Humanities University; Konstantine Chakhunashvili, PhD Associate Professor at Caucasus University; and Nadia Asaad, journalist and researcher working with the Center for Applied Nonviolent Action and Strategies and a graduate student at the Paris Institute of Political Studies (Sciences Po).

Once praised as a “Beacon of Democracy,” Georgia now faces mounting concerns over its slide towards authoritarian rule. Under the influence of oligarch Bidzina Ivanishvili, the country’s ruling elite is consolidating power through corrupt, authoritarian practices. While the United States and several European Union member states have already responded with sanctions targeting key decision-makers and their associates, Washington lawmakers are now debating legislation supported by both Republicans and Democrats to ratchet up the pressure.

The Mobilizing and Enhancing Georgia’s Options for Building Accountability, Resilience, and Independence (the MEGOBARI Act) would require the President to impose new sanctions on Georgian leaders and anyone “engaged in significant acts of corruption or acts of violence or intimidation in relation to the blocking of Euro-Atlantic integration in Georgia.” It is an essential element in defending democracy and the rule of law in Georgia. which in turn will help prevent organized crime networks operating through and in Georgia from fueling Russia’s war machine and undermining Euro-Atlantic integration.

After a decade of state capture, cosmetic “reforms”, and the consolidation of informal power networks, all documented by the Basel Institute, a sanctions regime codified by MEGOBARI Act and calibrated to the Georgian context is no longer optional: it is critical to prevent Georgia’s antidemocratic leanings from infecting its neighbors.

This post documents the Georgian state’s slide into a “cartel-state” and explains how MEGOBARI and other measures by U.S. and EU can arrest it.

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