Regulatory capture
Discussion paper
A public, Australian AI
The author of this paper argues that Australia must invest in sovereign capability in artificial intelligence (AI), with a public good imperative to service the community’s ongoing needs. Taxing large technology companies appropriately, and generating special levies, or charging them for the datasets they use...
Article
The regulator’s dilemma – regulating in a sea of influence
This article describes the tight rope walked by regulators in carefully navigating the need to positively engage with the sector they regulate while also ensuring standards are enforced.
Journal article
The commercial determinants of unhealthy diets
This article argues that to reduce the burden of unhealthy diets, there is a clear need for government-led action to disrupt the balance of power that currently favours commercial interests over public health.
Article
Avoiding regulatory capture and regulatory discord
The relationship between a regulator and the organisations it regulates – like any relationship – should never be taken for granted. Much media attention is given to regulators who are too close to the entities they regulate. This article also discusses the opposite end of...
Journal article
“Part of the solution”: food corporation strategies for regulatory capture and legitimacy
This article details how corporate practices have evolved and changed over the past two decades and gives some definition to what this new political economy signifies for the wider behaviours of corporations producing and selling harmful commodities.
Article
How regulators can benefit from a focus on risk: Harvard's Malcolm Sparrow
One of the issues that afflicts regulation is the “swinging of the regulatory pendulum”, as governments switch from adversarial enforcement-centred strategy to more trusting and cooperative postures, and then swing back again when something awful happens.
Report
Corruption risks associated with public regulatory authorities
This report provides an overview of the corruption risks associated with public regulatory authorities in Victoria. It explores the causes of these risks, the factors that drive corruption risks in these authorities, and potential prevention, reporting and detection measures.