Charmian Gooch: My wish: To launch a new era of openness in business
查米安▪古奇: 我的愿望:为商业公开化开启一个新时代
Charmian Gooch is the 2014 TED Prize winner. At Global Witness, she exposes how a global architecture of corruption is woven into the extraction and exploitation of natural resources. Full bio
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这会带来怎样的后果。
在我难以被驾驭的青春期,
(演讲背景字幕:可是,为什么?)
那是很久以前
在伦敦北部
about the world's problems.
many, many times before.
现在已经拥有80个强劲的团队
journalists and lawyers.
观察者、记者和律师。
我们进行报道,
change the system itself.
而很努力得开展活动。
so many of the countries
是因为太多国家
and education budget combined.
总和的两倍。
of much of its forests.
和一位律师
to launder profits
一笔几百美元的债务,
(都有匿名公司的出现)。
所披露案例的背后,
for outrageous crimes,
之中的某个避税天堂,
can set your one up for you,
routine business practice.
常规的商业行为。
out there of nominees
(注:阿根廷首都)
and the city and the country
整个城市,整个国家
government officials,
隐藏他们的身份呢?
an accepted business practice?
是被允许的商业行为?
be used as a moral shield.
在世界各地推动法律改革
支持公共名册。
to use company structures.
公司结构是可以接受的,
站在历史正确的一边。
business leaders, individuals,
商业领袖们,人们,
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Charmian Gooch - Anti-corruption activistCharmian Gooch is the 2014 TED Prize winner. At Global Witness, she exposes how a global architecture of corruption is woven into the extraction and exploitation of natural resources.
Why you should listen
Charmian Gooch co-founded the watchdog NGO Global Witness with colleagues Simon Taylor and Patrick Alley, in response to growing concerns over covert warfare funded by illicit trade in 1993. Since then, Global Witness has captured headlines for their exposé of "blood diamonds" in Uganda, of mineral exploitation in the Congo, of illegal timber trade between Cambodia and Thailand, and more. With unique expertise on the shadowy threads connecting corrupt businesses and governments, Global Witness continues its quest to uncover and root out the sources of exploitation.
In 2014, Gooch and Global Witness were awarded the $1 million TED Prize, along with the Skoll Award for Social Entrepreneurship, for their campaign to end anonymous companies. Gooch's TED Prize wish: for us to know who ultimately owns and controls companies and launch a new era of openness in business. Global Witness highlighted the importance of this issue in an investigation, aired on 60 Minutes, where they sent an undercover investigator into 13 New York law firms. The investigator posed as an adviser to a government minister in Africa and asked for thoughts on how to move money into the United States for a plane, a yacht and a brownstone. All but one firm offered advice.
The Panama Papers, released in April of 2016, further demonstrate the need for transparency. The papers paint a picture of how the rich and powerful around the world use offshore accounts and anonymous companies to move money. "This secretive world is being opened up to global public scrutiny," said Gooch, on the day the papers were released.
Charmian Gooch | Speaker | TED.com