Legal Defense Funding for Civil Society Activists
RWI works to protect civil society activists promoting transparency and accountability under repressive regimes. We have provided support for the legal defense costs associated with the wrongful imprisonment and trail of Christian Mounzeo and Brice Mackosso, coordinators of the Publish What You Pay coalition in Congo-Brazzaville. They were arrested in the city of Pointe-Noire in April 2006 on trumped-up charges. The charges came at a crucial moment in the ongoing national and international campaign for more accountable and transparent management of Congo's oil sector. Ironiccally, thes moves against Mssrs. Mounzeo and Mackosso appear to be a response to the success of PWYP Congo's advocacy efforts.
In 2007, RWI supported Global Witness to help cover legal defense costs associated with the detainment and trial of human rights activist Dr. Sarah Wykes in Angola. Global Witness's efforts included included high profile legal assistance, international information dissemination and the lobbying of influential stakeholders and decision-makers. RWI and the PWYP coalition succeeded in persuading members of the U.S. Congress, the U.S. government and international financial institutions to strongly protest Ms. Wykes's arrest by the government of Angola, and ultimately secured her release.
Unless activists are allowed to express their views, unite for advocacy campaigns and work for information disclosure without fear of illegitimate charges and detentions, accountability, democracy and good governance cannot thrive. RWI remains committed to protecting activists across the globe who are working to build open societies.
Revenue Transparency
The linkages between resource wealth, poverty, conflict and corruption–the so-called "resource curse"–are well documented. Public information and public accountability are the best guarantee that a country's resource wealth will translate into lasting benefits for its citizens over time.
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Expenditure Transparency
It is impossible to ensure proper management of natural resource wealth by looking exclusively at revenues. Transparent and accountable management and expenditure of public funds is essential to addressing the poverty, corruption and autocracy that too often plague resource rich countries.
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Iraq
Iraq, a nation of 25 million people, holds the second largest oil reserves in the world. But the pervasive violence, mismanagement and abuse of recent years have denied its people any lasting benefits from this wealth.
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Peru
Overall, Peru performs much better than many resource abundant countries in both revenue and expenditure transparency, thanks to a legal framework that guarantees citizens access to basic information about oil, gas and mining revenues and their distribution and usage.
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PUBLICATIONS
![]() Escaping the Resource CurseToo often, developing nations with natural resource wealth face greater conflict, corruption, and poverty than developing nations without an abundance of oil, gas or minerals. There are solutions to this "resource curse," but not without fundamental political changes.Read more about Escaping the Resource Curse and order copies online ... |

