The EAACN is launching a series of podcasts “Unchained”!

The EAACN is launching a series of podcasts “Unchained”!

Today, on The International Anti-Corruption Day, the Eurasian Academic Anti-Сorruption Network launches the first episode of the series of podcasts “UNCHAINED: Success stories on fighting corruption in Eastern Europe and Eurasia”!

Corruption has no boundaries, but what about the methods of fighting it? What is the scientific approach to preventing and combating corruption? What anti-corruption tools have proven to be universal for independent countries with a shared Soviet past and a similar nature of corruption?

Inna Nelles explores these questions in a series of in-depth interviews with the experts of the Eurasian Academic Anti-Corruption Network. The guests of the podcast talk about the successes of the anti-corruption fight and the lessons we can learn from Ukraine, Moldova, Armenia, Georgia and Kyrgyzstan. These insights will be of use to all those who are looking for effective solutions in the fight against corruption or investigating the post-Soviet space. 

And today, we are happy to share the first episode of the series of podcasts called “What is corruption in the modern world?”

•  How can people effectively steal in the 21st century?

•  Has corruption changed over the years of the pandemic?

•  What is the scientific approach to the fight against corruption?

•  What is special about corruption in Eastern Europe and Eurasia, and can these countries turn from a source of problems to part of the solution?

The answers to these and many other questions you will hear in the first episode of Unchained with Oksana Huss, an expert on political corruption in countries with transition economies, hosted by an author and presenter Inna Nelles.

The episode is available on SoundCloud – here.

Soon on Google podcasts, Spotify, and Apple.

This episode of podcasts is implemented by the Anti-Corruption Research and Education Centre with the support of the International Renaissance Foundation. The episode reflects the position of ACREC and does not necessarily coincide with the position of the  International Renaissance Foundation.