Archives par année de publication: 2016

Tactical Tax Planning

The Panama Papers have highlighted the need for an international consensus on tax planning. In the May issue of Governance & Compliance we look at the role of offshore financial centres and the increasing use of aggressive tax avoidance. This ill-defined category is widely regarded as both unethical an unacceptable, yet remains legal. We argue…

big ben and the house of lords

Anti-bribery and corruption in 2016: the increasingly global context

Robert Barrington, executive director of Transparency International opened our debate on the international anti-corruption landscape with a summary of the global picture. The Changing Landscape o The Tightening net of anti-corruption legislation While much has been done to strengthen anti-corruption legislation around the globe, enforcement remains a problem. Of the 41 signatories to the OECD…

Swimmer adjusts cap near indoor pool

GoodCorporation welcomes Transparency International’s Report on Global Corruption in Sport

“When you can write a 400-page report about why something is wrong, you’re not dealing with a minor yellow card offence. Sport has tolerated foul play for far too long, so Transparency International is absolutely right to call for real, irreversible change in its Global Corruption Report on Sport. Poor governance, corruption, doping and match-fixing threaten…

Person using tablet beside laptop

Dame Janet Smith Review published by the BBC

The BBC has published in full the report by Dame Janet Smith of her inquiry into culture and practices at the BBC during the Jimmy Saville and Stuart Hall years. Ahead of the Dame Janet Smith Report, GoodCorporation published its review of the BBC’s child protection and whistleblowing policies. Dame Janet Smith accepted the findings of…

Navigating from Safe Harbour to Privacy Shield

Following revelations regarding mass surveillance operations by the US National Security Agency, the mechanisms through which the personal data of EU citizens is protected when transferred to US organisations have come under considerable scrutiny. In October 2015, the European Court of Justice found one of the existing main mechanisms, the so-called “Safe Harbour” framework, to…

Big Ben with Westminster Palace under blue sky.

Sports Governance: what does good look like and are sports governing bodies doomed to fail?

GoodCorporation’s first Business Ethics Debate of 2016 began with the suggestion that sport’s governing bodies are doomed to fail in terms of ethical governance. Shaila-Ann Rao, former CEO of Sportfive International introduced the debate with an outline of the reasons why governance is failing in sport. 1. Sporting ideals of team spirit, fair play and…