This article explores state and federal Australian cases from the past thirty years - legal judgments, inquiries and political scandals - which implicate the law and concept of electoral bribery. Specifically it examines deals involving preferences and arrangements made between politicians and "third parties" such as lobby groups and the media. It shows that, defying assumptions that it died out a century ago, electoral bribery remains a thorny ethical and legal concept, particularly given evolving norms and electioneering practices. If bribery is to be a workable ethical or legal concept for judging contemporary electoral conduct then it needs to deal with horizontal relations between political actors rather than, as it traditionally has, ...
Elections ought in theory to go a long way towards making democracy ‘work’, but in many contexts, th...
This article provides an overview of the controversy surrounding the 2013 election of senators for W...
In 2019, the High Court of Australia used the term 'level playing field' no less than 18 times when ...
Electoral bribery is an ancient phenomenon, but its manifestations and pathologies can only be under...
This article addresses a number of key issues confronting contemporary electoral law in Australia. I...
Corruption – “grand” or “gray” – is an international problem, and government is a high-risk domain. ...
This article is intended to compare and see the differences and similarities between money politics ...
This thesis is about political corruption. Specifically it is concerned with two issues: (1) the way...
In this research I analyse how the existence of regulations that allow private funding of election c...
In this chapter, I analyze how state crimes emerge when incumbents utilize their offices to reciproc...
With four elections in twelve months it’s likely that allegations about electoral fraud will surge i...
Local and international public opinion polls suggest that Australia is a low-risk country in terms o...
This paper reviews recent allegations of electoral misconduct, especially in the context of pre-sele...
The recent conviction and gaoling of former Rio Tinto executive Stern Hu and as well as a further 18...
Political corruption affects each nation-state differently, but the outcomes are nominally the same:...
Elections ought in theory to go a long way towards making democracy ‘work’, but in many contexts, th...
This article provides an overview of the controversy surrounding the 2013 election of senators for W...
In 2019, the High Court of Australia used the term 'level playing field' no less than 18 times when ...
Electoral bribery is an ancient phenomenon, but its manifestations and pathologies can only be under...
This article addresses a number of key issues confronting contemporary electoral law in Australia. I...
Corruption – “grand” or “gray” – is an international problem, and government is a high-risk domain. ...
This article is intended to compare and see the differences and similarities between money politics ...
This thesis is about political corruption. Specifically it is concerned with two issues: (1) the way...
In this research I analyse how the existence of regulations that allow private funding of election c...
In this chapter, I analyze how state crimes emerge when incumbents utilize their offices to reciproc...
With four elections in twelve months it’s likely that allegations about electoral fraud will surge i...
Local and international public opinion polls suggest that Australia is a low-risk country in terms o...
This paper reviews recent allegations of electoral misconduct, especially in the context of pre-sele...
The recent conviction and gaoling of former Rio Tinto executive Stern Hu and as well as a further 18...
Political corruption affects each nation-state differently, but the outcomes are nominally the same:...
Elections ought in theory to go a long way towards making democracy ‘work’, but in many contexts, th...
This article provides an overview of the controversy surrounding the 2013 election of senators for W...
In 2019, the High Court of Australia used the term 'level playing field' no less than 18 times when ...