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Wednesday 17 June (0830 - 0900)

Wednesday 17 June (0900 - 0915)

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Opening by the Conference Chairs

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Wednesday 17 June (0915 - 0945)

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This keynote, led by the Co-Chair of the Conference and of the Committee, Deirdre O’Mahony, highlights current enforcement shifts, priorities emerging from geopolitical fragmentation, and new cooperative mechanisms between regulators and global financial centers.

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Wednesday 17 June (0945 - 1000)

Wednesday 17 June (1000 - 1115)

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This panel explores the recalibration of anti-corruption enforcement strategies in the wake of the US enforcement priorities, shifting resource allocations, and the growing complexity of multinational cases. Experts will examine diverging enforcement philosophies and their implications for legal certainty and cross-border cooperation. Discussion will also consider the tension between aggressive enforcement and the need for predictable compliance environments.

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Wednesday 17 June (1130 - 1245)

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Banks and financial intermediaries are increasingly expected to not only prevent corrupt conduct by their employees for the benefit of the financial institution, but also to serve as the first line of defence against corrupt capital flows by bank clients. This session will analyse the evolving expectations for financial institutions in detecting and preventing corruption.   Participants will discuss methods of successfully detecting and preventing corruption by employees and by clients, including the use of data-driven monitoring and coordinated supervision and information-sharing frameworks such as through private-public partnerships.
 

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Wednesday 17 June (1245 - 1400)

Wednesday 17 June (1400 - 1515)

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As financial transactions grow more sophisticated, tracing illicit funds requires both advanced analytical capacity and cross-border cooperation. This panel explores new tracing methodologies, including the use of fintech analytics and AI-driven detection, as well as the legal constraints that complicate the seizure and recovery of hidden assets. Discussion will address how differing judicial systems, confidentiality barriers, and sovereign immunity create friction in international recovery efforts. The panel will also review global efforts to uncover hidden ownership, the role of institutions in due diligence, and the effectiveness of transparency initiatives against money laundering and corruption.
 

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Wednesday 17 June (1530 - 1645)

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Large-scale private capital flows, often operating through complex vehicles, increasingly influence global markets yet remain subject to inconsistent scrutiny. This session examines how the shadow banking system can be exploited for corruption-related laundering and how international reform, or the lack thereof, impacts systemic transparency. This panel will also dissect the fragmented global regulatory landscape, discuss enforcement challenges in tracing crypto transactions across borders, and consider whether principles-based regulation can keep pace with technological innovation.
 

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Wednesday 17 June (1645 - 1700)

Wednesday 17 June (1700 - 1730)

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Delivered by a digital finance leader on how blockchain, AI, and digital identity verification are reshaping transparency and why technological innovation must be matched by regulatory sophistication.

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Wednesday 17 June (1730 - 1745)

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Summary of the main debates of day one, with emphasis on lessons drawn from enforcement convergence and diverging regulatory agendas.

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Wednesday 17 June (1830 - 2200)

Thursday 18 June (0900 - 0910)

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Brief introduction to day two.

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Thursday 18 June (0910 - 0940)

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A fire-chat with Anti-Corruption Committee, Senior Vice-Chair, Matthias Gstoehl, who will reflect on how to align systemic risk resilience with anti-corruption imperatives amid uncertain macroeconomic conditions.

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Thursday 18 June (0945 - 1100)

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Integrity compliance has increasingly become a foundational element in the sustainable development of the private sector, with significant implications for the global financial system. This discussion will focus on how, within the framework of the Multilateral Development Banks’ (MDBs) Sanctions System, robust integrity standards not only have shaped sustainable private sector growth but have contributed to the development of universally accepted standards for ethical business conduct. By sharing case studies, experts will examine the pivotal role that integrity compliance plays within MDB sanction systems and its far-reaching impact on the global financial system.

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Thursday 18 June (1100 - 1115)

Thursday 18 June (1115 - 1230)

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Recovering and repatriating stolen assets remains one of the most intricate and politically charged elements of anti-corruption work. This discussion will focus on restitution frameworks, from post-conviction proceedings to negotiated returns, and how they can ensure meaningful reparation. Discussion will also center on how justice for states and victims can be reconciled amid geopolitical constraints and competing sovereign claims. Case studies from recent global settlements will illustrate innovative, yet contentious, models for ensuring that recovered funds contribute to public welfare.


 

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Thursday 18 June (1230 - 1345)

Thursday 18 June (1345 - 1500)

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Anti-corruption enforcement now operates in an environment shaped by sanctions, de-risking, and strategic competition among powers. This session examines how economic sanctions and trade controls are increasingly used as anti-corruption tools and how these measures reshape global compliance obligations. The panel will explore how businesses can navigate a fragmented enforcement map influenced as much by diplomacy as by legality.
 

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