About Us
Transparency International–Kenya (TI-Kenya) is a not-for-profit organization founded in 1999 in Kenya with the aim of developing a transparent and corruption free society through good governance and social justice initiatives. TI-Kenya is one of the autonomous chapters of the global Transparency International movement that are all bound by a common vision of a corruption-free world.
Vision
“A transparent, accountable and corruption-free Kenya.”
Mission
To transform the society and institutions by supporting the development of high integrity leadership in all sectors and at all levels.
Our Core Values
Our strategic priorities 2012-2017
Our Approach
TI-Kenya will continue using advocacy as its signature approach. Advocacy will be complemented by other approaches including research, partnerships development, capacity building and civic engagement.
Sectoral Focus
In the five year period 2012 -2017, TI-Kenya will prioritize addressing corruption in the following sectors:Water, Education, Humanitarian aid, Climate finance governance, Police and the Extractive industry.
Programmatic Focus
Citizen Demand Programme
This programme builds political capital that can enable effective citizen engagement in public policy by establishing active citizen institutions on the ground. Through this programme, TI-Kenya will contribute to the generation of knowledge and skills that can help citizens build political capital that can in turn enable them to effectively influence public policy and provision of public services.
Objectives of the Citizen Demand Programme
Climate Governance and Integrity Programme
TI-Kenya`s Climate Governance and Integrity Programme (CGIP) came into being after Transparency International published the Global Corruption Report, 2010 focusing on climate governance and highlighted the need for dedicated programmatic response.
This programme’s goal is to contribute to promoting transparency, accountability, integrity and anti-corruption safeguards in Climate Finance Governance in Kenya.The specific goal of the programme is to increase the capacities of Transparency International-Kenya and Climate Finance Governance stakeholders to better engage, cooperate, advocate and contribute to effective climate finance governance, policy development, implementation and oversight.
Objectives of the Climate Governance and Integrity Programme
Governance and Policy Programme
This programme is split into two:
Governance. The Governance Programme was developed with the goal of realising critical institutions of governance addressing corruption issues in Kenya. The programme comprises two sub-programme areas; institutional reform and monitoring of public procurement and oversight institutions. It focuses on supporting governance institutions in enhancing transparency and accountability and building effective and reliable capacity development in corruption matters.
On the other hand, the Policy Programme is aimed at realizing effective legal and policy frameworks within critical institutions of governance addressing corruption issues in Kenya. The programme focuses on the constitutional & legal reforms necessary to actualise transparency and accountability in public affairs.
Objectives of the Governance and Policy Programme:
Humanitarian Aid Integrity Programme (HAIP)
During the first phase of the programme, an analysis of the 2011 drought response was conducted. Implemented in cooperation with key actors involved in the food assistance sector, including relevant ministries, international and national humanitarian organisations, development partners and beneficiaries, the “Food Assistance Integrity Study” identifies measures and recommendations to enhance accountability mechanisms that allow for more effective food security programmes. The study also encapsulates the findings of case studies and analyses integrity risks within different food assistance programmes implemented in affected regions in Kenya.
In the period between 2013 and 2015, TI Kenya, in cooperation with Humanitarian organisations and other partners, will continue enhancing integrity in the Humanitarian aid sector as well as foster citizens’ participation in the design and monitoring of basic services delivered in their communities.
The programme is structured around three components
Research Programme
The Research Programme creates a knowledge base for a national evidence-driven anti-corruption agenda. This provides TI-Kenya and other actors in the corruption fight with systematic, empirical and methodologically consistent information for the purposes of monitoring and evaluating anti-corruption efforts, assessing their impact and tracking institutional change over time.
The Research Programme also aims to measure corruption and provide benchmarks of integrity and efficiency in public organisations. By so doing, it puts public pressure on managers of public organisations to address corruption; and likewise to provide a measure that can be used to recognise achievement in combating corruption.
Key tools of the Research Programme:
The East African Bribery Index (EABI)
First published in January 2002 as the Kenya Urban Bribery Index (KUBI), the index has since gone regional and now covers Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda and Burundi. It is the foremost empirical survey of bribery in the region. The Bribery Index ranks public organisations using indices based on surveys in which ordinary citizens report their daily experiences with bribery. The Index captures the responses of East Africans when questioned on whom they bribed, how much they paid, and what the bribe was for.
Integrity Studies, Research Papers, Opinion polls and Case Studies:
TI-Kenya conducts integrity studies, research papers and case studies on corruption and governance. The papers encourage the accumulation of scholarship and knowledge on corruption and its effects on development. The integrity studies, opinion polls and case studies inform TI-Kenya’s own advocacy interventions, particularly in areas where knowledge is insufficient. To these ends, TI-Kenya engages researchers/policy analysts to study and identify reforms in priority areas in the research programme.
Advocacy and Communications programme
The Advocacy and Communications Programme raises the public profile of corruption as a development, economic, political and social issue in Kenya. It disseminates findings of TI-Kenya’s research programme in an innovative way which cultivates demand driven advocacy.
Key tools of the Advocacy and Communications Programme
Getting tough on corruption: The need for an ‘angel of death’ The Constitution of Kenya 2010 entrenches education as a right of every person under Article 43 (1) f. Article 53 (1) b, further recognises that every child has the right to free and compulsory basic education. The function of education therefore has to be fully executed by the government as a constitutional right to Kenyans. Schedule four of the constitution stipulates the different functions to be performed at the different levels of government. Read more... | |
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The Star: MPs pass law regulating the award of national honours Nation: Not again! MPs in night payrise trick
Standard: Life of Tenth Parliament comes to an end 12.7m voters listed as deadline dawns | |
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Stop this parliamentary tyranny, greed and impunity now! | |
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Event: Turkana Capacity Building a Workshop Date: 30th May 2013 Venue: Turkana
Event: Strengthening Accountability to Affected Populations Workshop Date: Turkana-31st May 2013 Venue: Turkana
Event: Stakeholders mapping and community visits in Turkana county Date: 1st to 5th June 2013 Venue: Turkana
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