TI Strategy 2020

TI Strategy 2020
TI-S Website Visitors Survey (21 March 2015)

This post TI Strategy 2020 describes the online survey by Transparency International and presented as infographics available at TI-S’s website.

The survey was opened to the public from February 22 to March 22, 2015 with 308 people as respondents.

62% of the respondents are male and 38% are female.
42% of the respondents are from Europe and Central Asia, followed by 22% from the Americas, and 16%, 13% and 6% from Asia-Pacific, Middle East and North Africa and Sub-Saharan Africa respectively.

56% of the respondents belong to ‘management and professionals’ affiliation, while the rest is distributed to respondents of various professional affiliations.

Question 1: What are the 3 priority issues what TI should address over the next five years?

The respondents offered various issues that need to be tackled including: procurement, private sector, politics organized crime/citizen security, natural resources, judiciary, inequality and wealth, cross-border/financial system, human rights, defense and security, climate change, civil society space, basic public services (health, water…)

Top 3 Priorities Issues Findings:
1st: Politics
2nd: Basic public services
3rd: Inequality and wealth

Politics got 56%, Basic public services got 47% and Inequality and wealth has 32% which is closely followed by Human Rights issues with 31%.

Question 2: What are the 3 most effective approaches for how TI can address the priority issues you selected?
The respondents offered 10 approaches, namely: work with the public sector promote their integrity, work with business to promote their integrity, monitor the behavior of the political and economic elites, monitor enforcement of anti-corruption laws at country level, mobilize people to speak out/act against corruption, mainstream anti-corruption in the work of other CSOs and institutions, litigate strategic grand corruption cases, investigate individual corruption cases, develop international anti-corruption standards, and advocate at regional/global level.

Top 3 approaches selected:
1st: Mobilize people to speak out/act against corruption (47%)
2nd: Monitor the behavior of the political and economic elites and Develop international anti-corruption standards (41% each)
3rd: Monitor enforcement of anti-corruption laws at country level (37%)

Question 3: Over the next 5 years, which 3 top capacities are most important for TI to achieve its goals?

Top 3 capacities selected:

1st: Knowledge – TI should serve as a resource on corruption knowledge offering anti-corruption know-how and sense-making on corruption research to a wide range of stakeholders (65%)
2nd: Impact – TI should demonstrate the impact of corruption and of stopping it on people’s lives
3rd: Network – TI should strengthen its network of National Chapters and enable strategic presence around the world

The last two are Partnership (partnership with institutions and organizations with 52%) and Advocacy (reach broader range of stakeholders with 52%).

The main aim of TI Strategy 2020 web survey is to get the public’s opinion especially ordinary people who are not involved or not working for any anti-corruption organizations.

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