GW Law Webinar Series 2025: Open Contracting Around the Globe

Registrants from Thirty-Nine Countries Spanning Six Continents

A webinar series in July 2025, showcasing open contracting case studies turning public procurement into a digital, data-driven government service enhancing accountability, competition, innovation, and sustainability.

Please join GW Law School’s Government Procurement Law Program and the Open Contracting Partnership (OCP) (OCP program page) for a free webinar series on open contracting around the world. 

Georg Neumann (OCP) – Series Co-Coordinator

The series, led by some of the world’s leading experts, will examine how different nations have implemented the principles of open contracting to turn public procurement into a data-driven, user-friendly, digital public service. We will share how to engage stakeholders across government, business and civil society to collaborate on reforms, ensure procurement data is machine-readable and fully publicly available, and publish open data & create tools to drive systematic change. 

To accommodate different time zones around the world, the series will open with an overview session and then will feature 1) Asia and Oceania, 2) the Americas, and 3) Europe and Africa. Each session will be approximately 90 minutes

Editor’s note: The rough-cut recordings below will be updated.

Prelude – July 15, 2025

A brief overview of the series featuring Gavin Hayman (Open Contracting Partnership) and Jessica Tillipman (GW Law).

Asia and Oceania – Tuesday, July 22, 2025

  • Introduction to open contracting — Bernadine Fernz, Open Contracting Partnership
  • Philippines — Genmaries S. Entredicho-Caong, Executive Director Procurement Service of the Department of Budget and Management (PS-DBM): Improving efficiency, value for money and competitiveness from open contracting.
  • Thailand — Thanachoke Rungthipanon, Director of Electronic Government, Procurement Development Group, Comptroller General’s Department, Ministry of Finance on how open contracting red flags methodology is transforming public procurement in Thailand.
  • Indonesia — Wana Alamsyah, Head of Knowledge Management Division, Indonesia Corruption Watch.
  • India — Shuchita Rawal (CivicDataLab), on better procurement strategies that better serve people and protect our planet. From green budgeting to disaster risk reduction.

Americas – Thursday, July 24, 2025

  • Introduction to open contracting — André Lima, Open Contracting Partnership.
  • Chile — Cristian Céspedes, Director Technology, ChileCompra: A holistic approach — sustainable, inclusive and efficient public procurement.
  • Dominican Republic — Carlos Pimentel, Director, Corruption red flags.
  • Mexico — Gloria Morales, Secretaria de Administración de Nuevo León, e-GP Nuevo Leon.
  • United States – Christopher Yukins & Anisley Sanchez (GW Law) – Pathway to open data in contracting. Slides

Editor’s note: Much of the “Americas” recording is in Spanish. For instructions on how to use automatic captioning in the YouTube video, see here.

Europe/Africa – Tuesday, July 29, 2025

  • Introduction to open contracting — Edwin Muhumuza, Open Contracting Partnership
  • United Kingdom — Lindsay Maguire, Deputy Director, Procurement Reform, Cabinet Office: Implementing the UK’s new public procurement legislation and data management system.
  • Rwanda — Joyeuse Uwingeneye, Director RPPA: Localizing public procurement implementation.
  • Uganda — Doreen Kyazze Mulema, PPDA on women’s inclusion through open contracting.
  • Lithuania — Kestutis Kazulis, Principal Advisor LPPO on sustainability and open contracting.

Lindsay Maguire of the UK Cabinet Office spoke on the United Kingdom’s experience in implementing the Public Procurement Act 2023 — and the extraordinary progress that the United Kingdom has made in implementing open contracting (Slides).

Special Addition: Open Procurement in the European Union

In this session, the panel dove deeper into the work that is happening in the European Union as it reforms the public procurement framework to guide the Member States and ensure efficient, competitive and accountable government spending. In this context, open contracting intersects with open procurement in the European Union — how governments and procuring entities can exchange data efficiently across borders in order to improve outcomes in procurement.

For this, we will have an introduction by Professor Gabriella Racca of the University and Turin (Slides), and then Luca Martinelli, Head of Unit at Publications Office of the European Union (Slides)

Resources

About open contracting and the Open Contracting Data Standard 

Benefits and impact of open contracting interventions

  • The Skeptic’s Guide by the Open Government Partnership provides a summary of the benefits of open contracting interventions
  • For country case studies, review OCP’s impact stories.
  • Evidence of the results emerging from open contracting interventions.
  • A study of more than 3.5 million government contracts across Europe shows that publishing more information about contracts decreases the risk of single bid tenders. This matters because single bid contracts are both a governance risk and are over 7% more expensive. It is estimated that publishing five more pieces of information about each tender could save Europe up to 3.6 billion Euros.
  • A World Bank survey of 34,000 companies in 88 countries found that competition was higher and kickbacks were fewer and smaller in places where transparent procurement, independent complaint procedures and external auditing are in place.
  • The U4 anti-corruption research centre finds that greater domestic competition on procurement markets and greater transparency are likely to improve economic welfare.
  • Open contracting generally aims to centralize and digitize procurement processes, creating greater reliability and integrity by distancing decision-makers from bidders as well as creating efficiencies of scale by combining the collective buying power of governments. Allowing commercial entities to have access to the entire catalogue of available tenders creates obvious advantages as far as competition goes. It levels the playing field, reducing the advantages of incumbency as established players lose their ability to obtain new contracts by capitalizing on existing relationships with officials, writes Michael Karanicolas in The Costs of Secrecy: Economic Arguments for Transparency in Public Procurement.
  • This expert report by the Center for Global Development covers evidence of reduced prices, increased competition and better services when contracting is opened up.

The case studies featured in the webinar series include: