Lutte contre la corruption, confiance du public et transparence organisationnelle 

La lutte contre la corruption, la confiance du public et la transparence organisationnelle sont des principes interdépendants nécessaires pour instaurer la confiance dans le gouvernement et le secteur privé. Les efforts de lutte contre la corruption visent à prévenir et à traiter les pratiques contraires à l’éthique, en veillant à ce que les ressources publiques soient utilisées de manière responsable et que le processus décisionnel soit équitable et responsable. Promouvoir la transparence organisationnelle signifie que les entreprises se transmettent ouvertement des renseignements sur leurs opérations, leurs pratiques financières et leur gouvernance, réduisant ainsi les possibilités de corruption. Cela renforce la confiance du public, car les Canadiens peuvent être sûrs que les organisations agissent au mieux de leurs intérêts.  

Activités liées à ce thème : 

Transparence des dépenses publiques 

Divulgation de la propriété bénéficiaire et transparence organisationnelle 

Renforcer et appliquer la réglementation en matière de lutte contre la corruption et de conformité 

Make it easier to speak up

par  NicoleCorrado

31 mai 2025

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The forms to fill out for complaints and concerns need to be accessible for people with learning disabilities.  Alternatives to police for many situations would be better for neurodivergent people like myself. 

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Stronger Conflict of Interest and Lobbying legislation, including releasing open data on a schedule on investigations

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Report Lobbying in Real-Time (Open Data). Lobbying Registry needs to expand what information is released so that it is more clear what is discussed. Define Lobbying and broaden the description Easier Access to Lobbying Information Cover More people and organizations under LA  Specifically address risks of hidden lobbying Ban Former Officials from Lobbying a longer time period Track Gifts and Benefits- clearer guidance that is public Empower the Commissioner: The Commissioner of Lobbying and the Ethics Commissioner should have more independence and power to investigate and punish violations.      Ask for Public Feedback: The government should regularly ask the public for their opinions on how well the Lobbying and Conflict of Interest Acts are working. This could help find problems and fix them faster. - Public consultation! Educate the Public: Many people don’t fully understand lobbying or conflict of interest rules. Running public awareness campaigns would help people recognize when  Simplify the Guidelines in plain language

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Show Action on Fentanyl & Honour Promises to Allies and Trade Partners on Beneficial Ownership

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Canada has done the tricky legislative and regulatory work required to implement the  national public beneficial ownership register. Canada committed to adopting the Beneficial Ownership Data Standard and reassured our allies and trade partners that Canada will use the international standard - https://www.ourcommons.ca/DocumentViewer/en/44-1/house/sitting-177/hansard#Int-12130517  Canada has a poor reputation in the OECD, G7, and WTO for our failure to prevent money laundering, and failure to adopt international standards on OCDS,BODS, - https://www.fatf-gafi.org/en/publications/Mutualevaluations/Fur-canada-2021.html. NGOs such as Transparency International and Publish What You Pay, have repeatedly said “Money laundering is the lifeline for criminal activity, the fentanyl crisis, and foreign interference. Canada will soon have a powerful tool that will strengthen the integrity of its economy.”  In the Fall of 2025 Canada will undergo an assessment and evaluation from the FATF with world bank and IMF participation. https://www.fatf-gafi.org/en/countries/fatf.html#:~:text=Jun%202016-,Nov%202025,-Jun%202026 This is also part of Canada's obligations as a signatory to the Open Data Charter. The main focus of Principle 5 of the ODC is to ensure that information that is published as a result of transparency or anticorruption laws is released as open data. https://opendatacharter.org/principles/#:~:text=Ensure%20that%20information%20published%20as%20a%20result%20of%C2%A0transparency%C2%A0or%C2%A0anticorruption%C2%A0laws%20is%20released%20as%20open%20data%3B Let's get our BODS setup before then. We can do this in a weekend by downloading the software developed by more mature partner nations from https://github.com/openownership/visualisation-tool, and loading in the data that ISED has been mismanaging for the past ~18 months since Bill C-42 received royal assent. If Canada can get this 4-5 hours of work done by the November FATF visit, then we show our allies we are serious about transparency, and the fentanyl crisis.  

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