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New research lays blueprint for fairer, higher integrity government

The Australian House of Representatives. Photo: Aditya Joshi

A landmark new report by Griffith University and Transparency International Australia sets out how Australia should build a stronger, fairer, more accountable system of government.

Led by Griffith University, the Australian Research Council funded assessment included contributing researchers and authors from across Australia, desktop research, two national attitude and experience surveys, five stakeholder workshops and 50 face-to-face interviews.

Lead author Professor A J Brown from the Centre of Governance and Public Policy.

“Despite increased trust in the performance of governments during COVID19, citizen belief that corruption in government is a problem has also risen from 61% in 2018 to 66% in late October 2020 – confirming the imperative for action,” according to lead author, from the.

“The lack of a federal anti-corruption watchdog is confirmed as the biggest institutional gap in our integrity system.”

“However it is not a silver bullet – we need political consensus on a strong national commission, but also action to strengthen the integrity of politics and government at all levels, including more effective regulation of lobbying, checks on undue influence, and fairer, more honest election campaigns.

“We also must value the contribution of whistleblowers and public interest journalism to the integrity of our democracy.”

Welcoming the final report, lead partner Transparency International Australia CEO Serena Lillywhite said: “Australians are loudly demanding that our politicians and public servants act with honesty, transparency and integrity.

“The assessment strongly endorses the need for a strong, independent Commonwealth integrity agency with scope to review criminal or non-criminal conduct that undermines integrity of public decision-making, and points the way forward for new, best practice investigation and public hearing powers.”

“While Australia has a strong past record for integrity in public decision-making, democratic innovation and multi-agency frameworks for controlling corruption, Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index confirms we’ve been slipping.”

“This comprehensive blueprint for Australia to have a strong anti-corruption and pro-integrity framework shows us the path towards a fairer and healthier democracy,” Ms Lillywhite said.

Read report.

/University Release. View in full .