The drive for integration has created a paradoxical environment where governments treat EU directives as a pretext to bypass domestic oversight. In Kyiv, legislative momentum toward anti-corruption standards has stalled, with officials often only acting when external pressure is applied. Oleksandra Misiura of Transparency International Ukraine notes that internal reforms remain uneven, with the parliament frequently ignoring critical civil society input under the guise of urgent harmonization.
This pattern repeats across the Balkans. In Albania, officials justify opaque lawmaking by claiming that EU-mandated texts leave no room for local negotiation. Such shortcuts are yielding poor results: Albania currently ranks 91st on Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index, struggling with persistent financial crime and money laundering. Similar institutional vulnerabilities plague Bosnia and Herzegovina and Ukraine, both of which rank among the lowest in the region.





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