EU Directive 2019/1937
Definition
The EU Whistleblower Protection Directive, requiring organisations with fifty or more employees to establish internal reporting channels, acknowledge reports within seven days, follow up within three months, and protect reporters from defined retaliatory acts across a broad list of EU law areas.
Related terms
- Anonymous hotline
- A reporting channel that accepts information without recording the reporter's identity. Effective hotlines use third-party operators so that the employing organisation cannot...
- Dodd-Frank Act (2010)
- United States federal legislation that created the SEC Whistleblower Program, authorising awards of ten to thirty percent of sanctions exceeding one million...
- Retaliation
- Adverse action taken against a reporter in response to a protected disclosure. Common forms include dismissal, demotion, harassment, pay reduction, and exclusion...
- Tone at the top
- The ethical stance, values, and behaviour modelled by an organisation's senior leadership. When executives consistently enforce standards and address misconduct regardless of...
- Whistleblower
- An individual, typically an employee or former employee, who reports suspected misconduct to an internal hotline, audit committee, regulator, or law enforcement...
Explained in
- Whistleblower Programmes, Hotlines, and Anti-Fraud CultureThe EU Whistleblower Protection Directive, requiring organisations with fifty or more employees to establish internal reporting channels, acknowledge reports w...