BEGIN:VCALENDAR VERSION:2.0 PRODID:-//hertie-school.org//NONSGML kigkonsult.se iCalcreator 2.39.1// CALSCALE:GREGORIAN METHOD:PUBLISH UID:11a362c7-269b-4b9b-8ac5-e488c5652f2d X-WR-TIMEZONE:Europe/Berlin X-WR-CALDESC:The international anticorruption regime after Donald Trump X-WR-RELCALID:a5ff92dd-a80b-4cfd-b70a-69c59bc6fb99 BEGIN:VEVENT UID:412d51ad-3455-483c-9b5a-a742e209eefb DTSTAMP:20240514T043702Z DESCRIPTION:Over the past 20 years\, anticorruption has made its mark on th e international agenda. International legal norms and the international de velopment agenda have both taken up anticorruption as  a key issue. But\, how do these norms change in a time where many Western governments seem to have their own problems with conflicts of interest and informal  practice s. In a lunchtime lecture at the Hertie School\, Prof. Michael Johnston wi ll explore the nature of the international anticorruption regime and trace its recent developments since the election of Donald Trump as US Presiden t. \nThe lecture is presented by the European Research Centre for Anti-Cor ruption and State-Building (ERCAS). It will be followed by a discussion\, chaired by Alina Mungiu-Pippidi\, Professor of Democracy Studies at the He rtie School.\nTo register\, please send an e-mail to endrizzi@hertie-schoo l.org.\n\nMichael Johnston is the Charles A. Dana Professor of Political S cience \, Emeritus and former Division Director for the Social Sciences at Colgate University and distinguished professor at the Internaitonal Anti- Corruption Academcy (IACA).  His book — Syndromes of Corruption: Wealth\, Power\, and Democracy (Cambridge University Press\, 2005) — won the 2009 G rawemeyer Award for Ideas Improving World Order\, presented by the Univers ity of Louisville. He has studied political and administrative corruption since 1975\, and from 1985 through 1996 was a founding co-editor of the jo urnal Corruption and Reform. He has been a consultant to many internationa l organisations and development agencies\, including the World Bank\, OECD \, the Asia Foundation\, the New York State Commission on Governmental Int egrity\; USAID\, and the United Nations. His publications include Public S ector Corruption\; Civil Society and Corruption: Mobilizing for Reform (ed ited volume\, 2005)\; Political Corruption: Concepts and Contexts (co-edit ed with the late Arnold J. Heidenheimer\, 2002)\; Political Corruption: A Handbook (co-editors Arnold J. Heidenheimer and Victor LeVine\, 1988)\; Fr aud\, Waste\, and Abuse in Government (co-editor Jerome B. McKinney\, 1986 )\; and Political Corruption and Public Policy in America (1982).\n DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20171115T110000 DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20171115T130000 LOCATION:Hertie School of Governance | Forum SUMMARY:The international anticorruption regime after Donald Trump END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT UID:412d51ad-3455-483c-9b5a-a742e209eefb DTSTAMP:20240514T043702Z DESCRIPTION:Over the past 20 years\, anticorruption has made its mark on th e international agenda. International legal norms and the international de velopment agenda have both taken up anticorruption as  a key issue. But\, how do these norms change in a time where many Western governments seem to have their own problems with conflicts of interest and informal  practice s. In a lunchtime lecture at the Hertie School\, Prof. Michael Johnston wi ll explore the nature of the international anticorruption regime and trace its recent developments since the election of Donald Trump as US Presiden t. \nThe lecture is presented by the European Research Centre for Anti-Cor ruption and State-Building (ERCAS). It will be followed by a discussion\, chaired by Alina Mungiu-Pippidi\, Professor of Democracy Studies at the He rtie School.\nTo register\, please send an e-mail to endrizzi@hertie-schoo l.org.\n\nMichael Johnston is the Charles A. Dana Professor of Political S cience \, Emeritus and former Division Director for the Social Sciences at Colgate University and distinguished professor at the Internaitonal Anti- Corruption Academcy (IACA).  His book — Syndromes of Corruption: Wealth\, Power\, and Democracy (Cambridge University Press\, 2005) — won the 2009 G rawemeyer Award for Ideas Improving World Order\, presented by the Univers ity of Louisville. He has studied political and administrative corruption since 1975\, and from 1985 through 1996 was a founding co-editor of the jo urnal Corruption and Reform. He has been a consultant to many internationa l organisations and development agencies\, including the World Bank\, OECD \, the Asia Foundation\, the New York State Commission on Governmental Int egrity\; USAID\, and the United Nations. His publications include Public S ector Corruption\; Civil Society and Corruption: Mobilizing for Reform (ed ited volume\, 2005)\; Political Corruption: Concepts and Contexts (co-edit ed with the late Arnold J. Heidenheimer\, 2002)\; Political Corruption: A Handbook (co-editors Arnold J. Heidenheimer and Victor LeVine\, 1988)\; Fr aud\, Waste\, and Abuse in Government (co-editor Jerome B. McKinney\, 1986 )\; and Political Corruption and Public Policy in America (1982).\n DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20171115T110000 DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20171115T130000 LOCATION:Hertie School of Governance | Forum SUMMARY:The international anticorruption regime after Donald Trump END:VEVENT END:VCALENDAR 1