Regulatory Policy of the EAEU and Corruption Risks: Challenges of Aligning National and Supranational Requirements
Keywords:
EAEU, regulatory policy, technical regulation, anti-corruption legislation, corruption risks, harmonization of norms, accreditation and certification, state control and supervision, supranational legal regulation, digitalization, traceability, international anticorruption standards, OECD, UN Convention against Corruption, compliance, cross-border risks, legal harmonizationAbstract
This article examines the regulatory policy of the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) in the context of compliance with anti-corruption legislation and the mitigation of corruption risks arising in the process of unifying technical regulations, control procedures, and supervisory mechanisms. The study explores how integration processes affect the stability of national systems of state control, identifies typical corruption-prone factors emerging at the stages
of drafting and implementing supranational norms, and analyzes the specific features of cross-border corruption threats in the sphere of technical regulation. The author substantiates the need to enhance the transparency of supranational lawmaking, introduce
mechanisms for anti-corruption review of EAEU acts, harmonize accreditation and certification procedures, and further develop digital control tools, including electronic registers and automated systems. The article formulates proposals for creating a unified regulatory space with minimal areas of administrative discretion and outlines prospects for further research related to the digital transformation of supervisory mechanisms and the development of an anti-corruption compliance model for the supranational institutions of the EAEU.
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