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Making Sense of Corruption


Making Sense of Corruption

Hardback by Rothstein, Bo (University of Oxford); Varraich, Aiysha (Göteborgs Universitet, Sweden)

Making Sense of Corruption

£44.00

ISBN:
9781107163706
Publication Date:
9 Mar 2017
Language:
English
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Pages:
184 pages
Format:
Hardback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 28 May - 2 Jun 2024
Making Sense of Corruption

Description

Corruption is a serious threat to prosperity, democracy and human well-being, with mounting empirical evidence highlighting its detrimental effects on society. Yet defining this threat has resulted in profound disagreement, producing a multidimensional concept. Tackling this important and provocative topic, the authors provide an accessible and systematic analysis of how our understanding of corruption has evolved. They identify gaps in the research and make connections between related concepts such as clientelism, patronage, patrimonialism, particularism and state capture. A fundamental issue discussed is how the opposite of corruption should be defined. By arguing for the possibility of a universal understanding of corruption, and specifically what corruption is not, an innovative solution to this problem is presented. This book provides an accessible overview of corruption, allowing scholars and students alike to see the far reaching place it has within academic research.

Contents

Preface and acknowledgements; 1. Corruption and the relevance of political science; 2. Mapping related disciplines; 3. The evolution of corruption as a concept; 4. Corruption and human rights; 5. Corruption and clientelism; 6. Corruption and patronage; 7. Corruption and patrimonialism; 8. Corruption, state capture and political particularism; 9. The Chinese exception and alternative; 10. In conclusion: what is the opposite of corruption?; Bibliography.

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