Abstract
Corporate fraud has emerged as a considerable peril to corporate governance, investor confidence, and economic integrity in India. Recent occurrences of several notable corporate scandals have highlighted the deficiencies of traditional compliance and regulatory frameworks in the early detection of fraudulent activities. In this regard, whistleblower systems have gained paramount importance as an internal governance mechanism that permits employees and stakeholders to disclose unethical and illegal conduct within organizations. A whistleblower system constitutes a formalized structure that facilitates anonymous reporting of corporate impropriety while providing protections against retaliation. This paper seeks to investigate the efficacy of whistleblower mechanisms in the identification and prevention of corporate fraud. The research employs an empirical review methodology by scrutinizing instances of corporate fraud, regulatory documents, committee recommendations, and existing legal frameworks pertaining to whistleblowing in India. The analysis evaluates whether these mechanisms have proven to be efficacious in the early identification of fraudulent activities and the promotion of corporate accountability.
The investigation reveals that while whistleblower frameworks are essential for exposing corporate malfeasance, their efficacy is predominantly contingent upon strong legal protections, managerial support, and regulatory oversight. The advancement of whistleblower systems is imperative for cultivating ethical corporate governance within the Indian context.