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Global Integrity

Institutional Member
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Established in 2005, Global Integrity’s mission is to support progress towards more open, accountable, and effective governance in countries and communities around the world. We believe that societies, rich and poor, address challenges such as poor service delivery, inequality, poverty, and corruption more effectively when citizens are able to exercise their rights to shape the rules that govern their lives.

Governance reform is inherently political and complex. There are few, if any, cookie cutter solutions to governance related challenges that will work across diverse contexts. As such, any efforts to drive progress toward more open, accountable and effective governance must be led by local stakeholders, as they navigate and shape the political dynamics in their own particular contexts.

We support these processes by helping government and civil society partners to put adaptive learning — a structured, data-driven, problem-focused and iterative approach to learning by doing, which engages with local political realities while drawing on experiences from elsewhere — at the heart of their efforts to design and implement effective governance reforms.

We use the insights generated from our innovative and exploratory work with local partners to engage with multilateral and bilateral development agencies, and other external actors; encouraging them to operate in ways that support the country-level learning that is key to designing and implementing effective governance reforms.

Institutional Representative: Johannes Tonn, Director, Integrity & Anti-corruption

Johannes joined Global Integrity in 2013 and leads work on integrity and anti-corruption, including overseeing the Africa Integrity Indicators project and the Global Integrity Anti-Corruption Evidence (GI-ACE) programme. He supports partners in designing and implementing problem-driven, data-informed, and learning-centered approaches to solving governance challenges and focuses on questions of how the field of anti-corruption practitioners can approach data use and usefulness in politically engaged ways to more effectively generate governance and development outcomes. Prior to joining Global Integrity, Johannes worked on a range of governance projects, including social accountability-focused grassroots work with the Partnership for Transparency Fund, the decentralization process in Ecuador with the German Development Agency, and good governance programs in Mongolia with the United Nations Development Programme and the United Nations Volunteers. Before moving to D.C., Johannes worked for the United Nations Office for Project Services in Nigeria, facilitating the implementation of a disarmament, demobilization, and reintegration project in the Niger Delta. Johannes holds a Master’s degree in political science, economics, and international public law from Heidelberg University.

Established in 2005, Global Integrity’s mission is to support progress towards more open, accountable, and effective governance in countries and communities around the world. We believe that societies, rich and poor, address challenges such as poor service delivery, inequality, poverty, and corruption more effectively when citizens are able to exercise their rights to shape the rules that govern their lives. Governance reform is inherently political and complex. There are few, if any, cookie cutter solutions to governance related challenges that will work across diverse contexts. As such, any efforts to drive progress toward more open, accountable and effective governance must…
Research Regions
Africa
Asia
Europe
Middle East
Oceania
Thematic Area
Institutions & Governance
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