Eka Gigauri (; born 14 April 1978) is a Georgian civil society leader and human rights advocate. Since 2010 she has served as Executive Director of Transparency International Georgia, and has previously held roles on the Global Board of Directors of Transparency International.
She studied International Relations at Tbilisi State University, earned an MBA at the Caucasus School of Business, and an LLM in International Law from Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam. She also completed executive programmes at Stanford UniversityâÂÂs CDDRL, and an executive course at Harvard Business School.
GigauriâÂÂs early roles included internships at the Parliament of Georgia and the Georgian Public Broadcaster, followed by assignments at the Ministry of Transport and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
She later worked in public relations as a Consultant at IPM (2002âÂÂ2003) and as Public Affairs Coordinator at the Tbilisi Marriott Hotel (2003âÂÂ2004).
From 2004 to 2008, she served in leadership roles at the Border Police of Georgia, including as Deputy Head. Her work focused on anti-corruption reforms, modernisation of border operations, and European integration. After leaving government service she worked as a border and migration governance expert in the Netherlands and South Caucasus.
Gigauri joined Transparency International Georgia in 2010 and became Executive Director soon after.
Under her leadership the organisation expanded its investigative capacity, opened regional offices, and launched civic programmes on transparency and accountability.
Her responsibilities include supervising TI GeorgiaâÂÂs investigations, publications, public communications and advocacy on themes including political finance, media freedom, judicial independence and public procurement.
Major investigative cases under her stewardship include:
Her leadership has helped TI Georgia become one of the most reliable civil society institutions in Georgia and a significant contributor to democratic oversight.
Gigauri played an active role in the Must Carry / Must Offer campaign, leading to amendments to the Georgian Law on Broadcasting that ensured pluralistic political coverage during elections.
She also helped initiate the This Affects You â They Are Still Listening campaign, which pushed for stronger rules against illegal surveillance and political wiretapping.
Since 2023, Gigauri has been one of the most visible leaders opposing GeorgiaâÂÂs proposed foreign agents legislation. She has warned that the bill would derail European integration, restrict civil society and stigmatise critical voices. In interviews, she emphasised compliance with EU standards and the danger of copying Russian-style legislation.
International organisations have documented political pressure on Transparency International Georgia and other civil society groups.
On 12 September 2024, Gigauri testified before the United States Senate Committee on Foreign Relations during a hearing on anti-NGO laws.
GigauriâÂÂs early roles included internships at the Parliament of Georgia and the Georgian Public Broadcaster, followed by assignments at the Ministry of Transport (Civil Aviation Department) and Ministry of Foreign Affairs (International Organisations).
She later worked in public relations: as a Public Relations Consultant at IPM (2002âÂÂ2003) and as Public Affairs Coordinator at the Tbilisi Marriott Hotel (2003âÂÂ2004).
From 2004 to 2008, she served in leadership roles at the Border Police of Georgia, including as Deputy Head. Her work focused on anti-corruption reforms, modernisation of border operations, and European cooperation. After leaving government service she worked as a border and migration governance expert in the Netherlands and the South Caucasus.
Gigauri joined Transparency International Georgia in 2010 and became Executive Director soon after. Under her leadership the organisation expanded its investigative capacity, opened regional offices, and launched new transparency tools and civic programmes.
Her responsibilities include supervising TI GeorgiaâÂÂs research, investigative reports, public communications and advocacy on themes such as political finance, media freedom, judiciary independence and public procurement. She has emphasised exposing state-capture dynamics, business-political networks, and systematically weak governance.
Major investigative cases under her stewardship include:
Her leadership has helped TI Georgia become one of the most prominent civic organisations in Georgia and a major participant in democratic oversight and public accountability.
Gigauri has been a leading figure in GeorgiaâÂÂs civic movements over the past decade. She played an active role in the Must Carry / Must Offer campaign, which advocated for fair media access during elections and contributed to amendments to the Law on Broadcasting ensuring pluralistic political coverage.
She also helped initiate the This Affects You â They Are Still Listening campaign, which pushed for legal safeguards against unlawful government surveillance, intrusive data collection, and political eavesdropping practices.
Since 2023, Gigauri has been one of the most visible leaders opposing GeorgiaâÂÂs so-called foreign agents legislation, which sought to stigmatise and restrict independent civil society and media organisations. She led TI GeorgiaâÂÂs advocacy: presenting legal objections, mobilising public and international support, and warning that the legislation would threaten democratic freedoms, weaken civic space, and derail GeorgiaâÂÂs European integration.
Through her work with TI Georgia, she continues to speak out on corruption risks, independence of the judiciary, transparency of political finance and protection of journalists â including exposing cases of pressure on independent media outlets and efforts to silence critical broadcasting.
As civil society space in Georgia has come under increasing pressure, Gigauri and TI Georgia have faced escalating scrutiny, accusations of wrongdoing, surveillance and attempts to curtail their operations. International organisations have flagged one of TI GeorgiaâÂÂs key roles in documenting political capture and defending public interest.
In September 2024, she testified before the United States Senate Committee on Foreign Relations during a hearing on laws restricting NGOs. Through her international advocacy, she remains a prominent voice for GeorgiaâÂÂs democratic future.
Gigauri has held numerous elected or appointed roles in national and international structures, including:
Gigauri graduated from Tbilisi State University in Tbilisi, Georgia in 1999 with a degree in International Relations. She continued her studies at the Caucasus School of Business, where she obtained her master's degree in Business Administration in 2001. In 2010 Gigauri completed her second Masters and received LLM from VU University Amsterdam in the Netherlands.
In addition to degree programs in 2007 she attended the Senior Executive Seminar Course at George C. Marshall European Center for Security Studies.
In 2017 Eka Gigauri became the fellow of Stanford University CDDRL (Center on Democracy, Development and the Rule of law) "Draper Hills Fellows Program on Democracy and Development".
Gigauri started her career in 1996 as an intern in the Parliament of Georgia and Georgian Public Broadcaster. She continued her early work with the Georgian government as an Officer in the International Relations Office in the Ministry of Transport of Georgia (Civil Aviation Department) during 1998 and 1999. She then worked in the Department of International Organizations, UN Office, at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Georgia.
Gigauri started working in PR and marketing in 2002, when she joined the Institute of Polling and Marketing as a Public Relations Consultant. Later, in 2003 she was hired by Marriott International as a Public Affairs Coordinator in Tbilisi.
In 2004, Gigauri joined the public service and became the Head of Border Policy Provision Department in the Border Police of Georgia. She was promoted in 2005 to Deputy Head of the Border Police. She oversaw modernization of the force and cleaned up corruption. She also participated in negotiations with the EU on European Neighborhood Policy Action Plan (ENP AP). Gigauri worked on a long-term development strategy for the Georgian Border Police, as well as the enactment of the Integrated Border Management Strategy and the State Law on Border Police of Georgia.
In the following years, Gigauri worked as an expert at Caucasus Interconnect in the Hague, Netherlands. She provided recommendations in the field of security, including border security and migration in South Caucasian countries.
Since November 2010, Gigauri has been serving as the executive director at Transparency International Georgia (TI Georgia).
Under Gigauri's leadership TI Georgia greatly expanded both in terms of the people employed, but also in terms of donor funding attracted. Respectively, the portfolio of activities and projects of the organization was also increased.
Gigauri has been actively involved in various civic activism movements, including "Must Carry/Must Offer," which was eventually adopted into the Georgian Law on Broadcasting (Article 40)14. She was also one of the founders of the campaign "This affects you- They Are Still Listening," which petitioned the Georgian government to legislate against illegal surveillance.