The international fight against corruption
At a World Bank panel right now, global prosecutors and corruption fighters, including the International Criminal Court prosecutor and senior European Union, Interpol, and FBI officials, have convened to share notes and experiences. At the moment, the FBI official is outlining the vast resources at the bureau’s disposal, including thousands of agents. I can’t help ...
At a World Bank panel right now, global prosecutors and corruption fighters, including the International Criminal Court prosecutor and senior European Union, Interpol, and FBI officials, have convened to share notes and experiences. At the moment, the FBI official is outlining the vast resources at the bureau's disposal, including thousands of agents. I can't help but think that ICC prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo--who relies almost entirely on states to cooperate in the enforcement of warrants--must be feeling some pangs of envy.
At a World Bank panel right now, global prosecutors and corruption fighters, including the International Criminal Court prosecutor and senior European Union, Interpol, and FBI officials, have convened to share notes and experiences. At the moment, the FBI official is outlining the vast resources at the bureau’s disposal, including thousands of agents. I can’t help but think that ICC prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo–who relies almost entirely on states to cooperate in the enforcement of warrants–must be feeling some pangs of envy.
More: at the end of the session, World Bank president Robert Zoellick clearly signaled his interest in getting the Bank more involved in reform of national legal and judicial institutions. "We don’t do police forces, and we don’t do armies," Zoellick said, but he insisted that the Bank could be doing more in bolstering rule of law.
David Bosco is a professor at Indiana University’s Hamilton Lugar School of Global and International Studies. He is the author of The Poseidon Project: The Struggle to Govern the World’s Oceans. Twitter: @multilateralist
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