1. Win-Win Politics strategies
Since the 18th century, political separation of powers has been considered a good, working solution to reduce corruption stemming from the almost unlimited power of monarchs and other autocratic governments. Philosopher Montesquieu proposed the separation of powers as a model dividing government into separate branches, each of which has separate and independent powers. It is difficult to think of any better working solution to this very important danger. Even after the separation of powers, corruption, and abuse of power seem to be everywhere. It is of utmost importance that everyone in government to be rightfully motivated to dedicate every effort and resource in their reach towards the common good of those who are governed, the people.
In current democratic understanding, government officials, even Presidents, are elected by the people. So, modern efforts to improve government focus on making it more efficient, reducing and eliminating corruption, and providing the best possible services to the people. Government transparency (through integrated e-governance) and good, functional education for everyone may well be the basic, necessary steps to take governments to a better stable level of efficacy, to properly regulate, and to bring basic public services to everyone that need those.
Sources: United Nations charters and programmes, World Bank. Other.

Selected Infographics
Click on any image to enlarge.
At the bottom of the description under each image, you may “click to source location”.
Basics of Governance
Separation of Powers
Division of a state’s government into branches, each with separate, independent powers and responsibilities. The doctrine of the separation of powers requires that the principal institutions of state— executive, legislature and judiciary—should be clearly divided in order to safeguard citizens’ liberties and guard against tyranny. (Click to source location.)
Integrated Governance Model
The Integrated Governance model is key to innovation, growth and sustainability. (Click to source location.)
Current State of Corruption
Corruption in Countries Around the World
Which countries are the most and least corrupt, and how they have improved (or declined) over the last ten years. (Click to source location.)
Where Corruption is Rampant
Countries and territories ranked on perceived public sector corruption in 2019. (Click to source location.)
Mapping corruption around the world
The countries with the most and least amounts of corruption. (Click to source location.)
U.S. slides in global anti-corruption index
The United States has dropped out of the top 20 “cleanest” countries for the first time since 2011. (Transparency International) (Click to source location.)
Concepts and initiatives to improve governance
Governance, integrity & anti-corruption initiatives report 2019
Improving the efficiency & transparency of public procurement. (Click to source location.)
The rise of smart governments
The digital transformation has enabled governments worldwide to provide speedy and innovative services to citizens. (Click to source location.)
Guide to corruption-free local government
UNPD. Available metodologies: transparency and open data, human resources management, internal audit, regulatory functions, security of information, etc. (Click to source location.)
Make your city corruption-free
UNDP works with local governments to reduce corruption. Empowered lives. Resilient nations. (Click to source location.)
How e-governance ensures transparency
Transparency: open communication between governments and citizens. (Click to source location.)
Health, and education
Three pillars of health promotion
Pillars: good governance, healthy cities, health literacy. (Click to source location.)
Investments in education and their multiplier effect
Multiplier effect compounds the returns in other sectors. With more education comes increased health, economic growth, and food security. (Click to source location.)
How higher education helps the economy
University return on investment statistics. Affordable universities with the best return on investment. Investments and returns. Unemployment rates and income. (Click to go to the original location. )
Open colleges: achievement gap
Inequities existent in the funding of Australia’s school system. (Click to source location.)
Student Outcomes
Online studying popularity and efficacy, compared to traditional methods. (Click to source location.)
Reference
Information sources
|
The following services base their opinions in reliable information: [ Mundo.Spain(r) ] – traffic # 830 [ ABC.Spain(site) ] – traffic # 1220 [ GreatBritain(site) ] – traffic # 70 [ Canada(r) **] – traffic # 1,120 [ France(r) ] – traffic # 39,700 [ U.S.Consulates(r) ] – traffic # 2,700 [ New York Times (r) ] – traffic # 80 [ CNN(r) ] – traffic # 70 |
[ Fox(site) ] – traffic # 220 [ CDC.USA(r) ] – traffic # 300 [ World Economic Forum(r) ] – traffic # 3,400 [ Healthline(r) ] – traffic # 250 [ WebMD(r) ] – traffic # 530 [ Mayo Clinic(r) ] – traffic # 870 [ Science/Research(r) ] – traffic # 125 [ MedicalScience(r) ] – traffic # 630
|