✅ Data-driven risk assessment of contracts: We use opentender.eu (maintained by the Government Transparency Institute) to assess the integrity of millions of contracts and select those that are more prone to corruption and irregularities. This helps to direct the focus of our civic monitoring to contracts where the potential preventive impact is higher.
✅ Data-Driven Contract Selection: Contracts are selected using OpenTender.eu, a platform maintained by the Government Transparency Institute. It provides real-time integrity scores for millions of contracts. Civic monitors use these scores — alongside criteria like contract relevance, feasibility, and value — to choose which tenders to analyze. In Italy, for example, open data from ANAC (the national anti-corruption authority) enabled monitors to connect funding information (CUP codes) with tenders (CIG codes), making in-depth tracking possible.
✅ Network Building: Each country involved in iMonitor fosters lasting civic monitoring networks. In Italy, over 80 individuals and organizations were contacted, and 13 groups completed the full monitoring process — from training to final report. The approach emphasizes collaboration over confrontation, helping to establish constructive dialogue with public authorities.
✅ Skill Development: A modular training programme is offered to all participants, covering the basics of public procurement, corruption risks, and how to conduct civic monitoring. National partners adapted the content to local contexts and languages, combining webinars with hands-on activities and ongoing support throughout the monitoring process.
✅ Reporting Tool: Monitors use a structured, user-friendly reporting template hosted on monithon.eu. Reports are made public, shared with relevant stakeholders, and — where appropriate — forwarded to public authorities for follow-up.