IMO the existing laws on fraud in most countries are sufficient, there's just a severe lack of investigative personnel. The article highlights a move by Denmark to establish a separate agency for enforcing existing laws in these kinds of situations and I think it's potentially a good remedy for the human resources problem here.
I think there ought to be an international body* for studying and highlighting effective developments in the justice systems of different countries for better spreading advances as they're made. Off the top of my head, Singapore has seen excellent cost savings from their approach to digitizing the court system (or at least the public-facing aspects) and only a couple countries have followed their model.
*If there already is one, I'd love to hear about it.
I think there ought to be an international body* for studying and highlighting effective developments in the justice systems of different countries for better spreading advances as they're made. Off the top of my head, Singapore has seen excellent cost savings from their approach to digitizing the court system (or at least the public-facing aspects) and only a couple countries have followed their model.
*If there already is one, I'd love to hear about it.