Publish What You Pay Explained
Publish What You Pay |
Abbreviation: | PWYP |
Formation: | 2002[1] |
Type: | NGO |
Purpose: | Financial transparency in the extractive industry |
Headquarters: | London, United Kingdom |
Region Served: | Global |
Leader Title: | Executive Director |
Leader Name: | Elisa Peter[2] |
Affiliations: | Open Society Foundations, Global Witness, CAFOD, Oxfam GB, Oxfam Novib, Save the Children UK, Transparency International UK, Catholic Relief Services, Human Rights Watch, Partnership Africa Canada, Pax Christi Netherlands and Secours catholique/Caritas France, a number of groups from developing countries. |
Website: | https://pwyp.org |
Publish What You Pay (PWYP) is a group of civil society organizations that advocates for financial transparency in the extractive industry.[3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] Publish What You Pay is a registered charity in England and Wales (Registered Charity Number 1170959),[9] and operates globally.
The group wants companies to declare the amount of money being paid to governments for the rights to extract oil, gas, and other natural resources.
In 2009 a report about PWYP's origins and progress between 2002 and 2007 was released. Entitled Publishing What We Learned, it was authored by Mabel van Oranje, formerly of the Open Society Institute, and Henry Parham, former International Coordinator of PWYP. It is freely available in English, French and Russian.[10]
In 2016, PWYP published a report together with CIVICUS about the backlash that natural resource activists face. The report was authored by Asmara Klein, of PWYP, and Inés M. Pousadela, of CIVICUS.[11]
Notes and References
- Web site: Publish What You Pay » History . 10 December 2022 .
- Web site: Publish What You Pay » the Team .
- Web site: Britain backs 'publish what you pay' rule for oil and mining firms in Africa . . February 20, 2011 . March 12, 2012 . Stewart, Heather . The long-running Publish What You Pay campaign, supported by a coalition of civil society groups worldwide, argues that if the scale of the payouts to host-country governments were revealed, voters would hold their leaders to account..
- Web site: Big energy and mining groups 'hide accounts using secrecy jurisdictions' . . September 19, 2011 . March 12, 2012 . Milmo, Dan . The study by Publish What You Pay Norway, which campaigns for transparent accounting among oil, gas and mining giants, claims that populations in resource-rich countries are losing out because they are unable to extract financial information from businesses operating on their soil or off their seaboards..
- Web site: Publish What You Pay Wins the 2010 Commitment to Development Award . . November 15, 2010 . March 12, 2012 . Publish What You Pay, a global civil society coalition dedicated to promoting revenue transparency in the oil, gas, and mining industries, is the 2010 winner of the Commitment to Development “Ideas to Action” Award, sponsored jointly by the Center for Global Development (CGD) and Foreign Policy magazine..
- Web site: The Year in Ideas; Forced Transparency . . December 15, 2002 . March 13, 2012 . Harden, Blaine . The Publish What You Pay coalition prods major companies to declare how much money they give governments in order to extract oil and minerals..
- https://www.sec.gov/comments/s7-42-10/s74210-29.pdf
- Book: Natural resources and violent conflict: options and actions . . Ian Bannon, Paul Collier . 2003 . 0-8213-5503-1 . registration . 17 . The Publish What You Pay campaign is calling for governments in developed countries to require stock exchanges to demand full disclosure of payments as a condition for company listings..
- Charity Commission for England and Wales http://apps.charitycommission.gov.uk/Showcharity/RegisterOfCharities/CharityFramework.aspx?RegisteredCharityNumber=1170959&SubsidiaryNumber=0
- Book: Publishing What We Learned . PWYP . Mabel van Oranje and Henry Parham . 2009 . 156.
- Book: Against All Odds . PWYP . Asmara Klein and Inés M. Pousadela . 2016 . 40.