Corruption is widely believed to be a self-reinforcing phenomenon, in the sense that the incentive to engage in corrupt acts increases as corruption becomes more widespread in the relevant community. Leading scholars have argued that corruption’s self-reinforcing property implies that incremental anticorruption reforms cannot be effective, and that the only way to escape a high-corruption equilibrium “trap” is through a so-called “big bang” or “big push.” This widespread view is mistaken. After surveying the reasons corruption might be self-reinforcing (or in some cases self-limiting), this paper demonstrates that corruption’s self-reinforcing property does not imply the necessity of a “big bang” approach to reform, and indeed may strengthe...
Although there has been a significant increase in research on the phenomenon of corruption over the ...
Does power lead to corruption (Kipnis, 1972), and if so, why? Here, a novel mechanism is proposed fo...
Corruption has become ubiquitous in both the private and public sectors of rich and poor countries a...
Countries making the transition to a market economy often experience an increase in corruption along...
Of all the issues faced by society, corruption is one of the most difficult to properly address. Cor...
Countries making the transition to a market economy often experience an increase in corruption along...
Tackling a problem requires mostly, an ability to read it, conceptualize it, represent it, define it...
During the last two decades the debate about corruption and ways to understand and contain it acquir...
With an increased awareness of the detrimental effects of corruption on development, strategies to f...
Major forms of corruption constitute a strong threat to the functioning of societies. The most frequ...
This study suggests that our anticorruption tools are fundamentally weakened by flaws in how corrupt...
Tackling a problem requires mostly, an ability to read it, conceptualize it, represent it, define it...
The importance of a better knowing of criminality, inclusively of criminal phenomenon of the corrupt...
In the last decades a chain of scandals fuelled a growing popular awareness of the relevance of corr...
paper starts by identifying a central theoretical problem in contemporary research about political c...
Although there has been a significant increase in research on the phenomenon of corruption over the ...
Does power lead to corruption (Kipnis, 1972), and if so, why? Here, a novel mechanism is proposed fo...
Corruption has become ubiquitous in both the private and public sectors of rich and poor countries a...
Countries making the transition to a market economy often experience an increase in corruption along...
Of all the issues faced by society, corruption is one of the most difficult to properly address. Cor...
Countries making the transition to a market economy often experience an increase in corruption along...
Tackling a problem requires mostly, an ability to read it, conceptualize it, represent it, define it...
During the last two decades the debate about corruption and ways to understand and contain it acquir...
With an increased awareness of the detrimental effects of corruption on development, strategies to f...
Major forms of corruption constitute a strong threat to the functioning of societies. The most frequ...
This study suggests that our anticorruption tools are fundamentally weakened by flaws in how corrupt...
Tackling a problem requires mostly, an ability to read it, conceptualize it, represent it, define it...
The importance of a better knowing of criminality, inclusively of criminal phenomenon of the corrupt...
In the last decades a chain of scandals fuelled a growing popular awareness of the relevance of corr...
paper starts by identifying a central theoretical problem in contemporary research about political c...
Although there has been a significant increase in research on the phenomenon of corruption over the ...
Does power lead to corruption (Kipnis, 1972), and if so, why? Here, a novel mechanism is proposed fo...
Corruption has become ubiquitous in both the private and public sectors of rich and poor countries a...