History
In the early 1990s, corruption was a taboo topic. Many companies regularly wrote off bribes as business expenses in their tax filings, and many international agencies were resigned to the fact that corruption would sap funding from many development projects around the world.
Education
Transparency School seeks to create a peer-to-peer learning and integrity-building environment that links theory with practice and helps young leaders to acquire skills to better convey the message of anti-corruption.The lectures, seminars, and trainings provide the School participants with a unique blend of international and local knowledge, while also challenging students to approach the subject from a new perspective and offer novel, previously untested solutions. Since 2010, Transparency School has welcomed more than 1600 youth leaders from more than 120 countries worldwide.
Short Courses
Library services
TILC library has more than 600 publications in English, Lithuanian as well as in other languages, on corruption, corruption risks and means of prevention. In our library you can also find the annual “Transparency International” reports, research conducted by World Bank, European Commission, United Nations Development Program, Transparency International.