ABSTRACT

Transparency International's Advocacy and Legal Advice Centres (ALACs) aim at citizen empowerment and engagement in the fight against corruption. ALACs encourage citizen complaints about specific instances of corruption, and support people to follow them up. While the ALACs are fundamentally demand-driven and therefore not focused on corruption in any specific sector, they have dealt with a number of cases in the education sector. The experience of the ALACs can provide valuable lessons for promoting anti-corruption in education.