WORKSHOP "Gender and Corruption in Development Cooperation"

Date: 10-11 November 2008
Location: GTZ Headquarter, Eschborn, Germany.


Report
Programme
Registration

Call for Papers

Presentations | First Panel: Experiences of International Organisations
Chair: Mareike Zenker (GTZ Eschborn)

Gender and corruption in development cooperation: What do we know from UNDP experiences?
Roohi Metcalfe (UNDP, Bangkok)

A lack of gender mainstreaming in anti-corruption reforms & measures in the
republic of Armenia. A look at how women in small business owners in the city of
Kapan deal with petty corruption.

Seta Iskandarian (OSCE, Armenia)

Presentations | Second Panel: Gender and Corruption: Country Examples
Chair: Georg Huber-Grabenwarter

Mainstreaming gender equality in anti-corruption measures: a challenging
experience for Cameroon

Hon Ndo Evina/Justice Prudence Galega (Cameroon)

Clientelism, poverty and gender: cash conditional transfer on the loop
Victoria Pereyra Irealo (CIPPEC, Argentina)

Gender and corruption: insights from Nigeria Democracy (1999-2008)
Damilola Taiye Agbalajobi (Redeemers University, Nigeria)

Presentations | Third Panel: Gender and Corruption in Sectors
Chair: Christine Müller (EADI, Bonn)

Gender and corruption in health: informal payments and moonlighting in Tajikistan
Waly Wane (World Bank)

Gender and corruption in public health services in Nicaragua: empirical and
theoretical conclusions for governance

Maaria Seppänen
(The Renvall Institute, Iberoamerican Centre, University of Helsinki, Finland)

Presentations | Forth Panel: Different Research Approaches to Gender and Corruption
Chair: Frédéric Boehm (UNCAC/GTZ, Eschborn)

Gender and corruption in laboratory experiments
Björn Frank (University of Kassel)

Preference for corrupt professions: does it poverty induced or social norm?
Abu Hena Reza Hasan (University of Dhaka, Bangladesh)

The impact of corruption on women´s economic empowerment
Ngotho wa Kariuki/Susan Awasa (University of Buea Cameroon)

Disparate impacts of corruption – will measuring them enhance literacy in policy
making?

Lilian Ekeanyanwu (National Coordinator of Zero-Corruption Coalition, Nigeria)


Impressions