One by one, UK public institutions are being scandalised for corruption, immorality or incompetence and subjected to trial by media and criminal prosecution. The state’s historic response to public sector scandal – denial and neutralisation – has been replaced with acknowledgement and regulation in the form of the re-vamped public inquiry. Public institutions are being cut adrift and left to account in isolation for their scandalous failures. Yet the state’s attempts to distance itself from its scandalised institutions, while extending its regulatory control over them, are risky. Both the regulatory state and its public inquiries risk being consumed by the scandal they are trying to manage
Bribery involves individuals exchanging material benefits for a service of a public institution. To ...
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to explore the origins of the Jimmy Savile Scandal in which th...
This article historically considers major public inquiries as an institution of the British regulato...
One by one, UK public institutions are being scandalised for corruption, immorality or incompetence ...
Paper prepared for presentation at the Karlsruhe Dialogues, ‘Organized Crime – The Dark Side of Glob...
The Independent Panel Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse was left in crisis following intense pressure ...
Public inquiries convened by ministers into matters of public concern are major instruments of accou...
This is the version of paper before it was formatted by the publisher.Institutions, at state and loc...
Paper presented to the panel ‘Morality, political scandals and the detachment of citizens from the p...
Are regulatory interventions delayed reactions to market failures or can regulators proactively pre-...
Although UK public inquiries garner huge amounts of public attention, there have been few systematic...
This article discusses the constraints on, and conflicts over, the oversight and regulation of mixed...
This study advances research on scandal through an empirical examination of one of the most extraord...
Much of the recent public outcry over the phone hacking scandal has been over the relative unaccount...
The Scandal in Academia is a large-scale fictional ethical case study of around 17,000 words and fou...
Bribery involves individuals exchanging material benefits for a service of a public institution. To ...
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to explore the origins of the Jimmy Savile Scandal in which th...
This article historically considers major public inquiries as an institution of the British regulato...
One by one, UK public institutions are being scandalised for corruption, immorality or incompetence ...
Paper prepared for presentation at the Karlsruhe Dialogues, ‘Organized Crime – The Dark Side of Glob...
The Independent Panel Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse was left in crisis following intense pressure ...
Public inquiries convened by ministers into matters of public concern are major instruments of accou...
This is the version of paper before it was formatted by the publisher.Institutions, at state and loc...
Paper presented to the panel ‘Morality, political scandals and the detachment of citizens from the p...
Are regulatory interventions delayed reactions to market failures or can regulators proactively pre-...
Although UK public inquiries garner huge amounts of public attention, there have been few systematic...
This article discusses the constraints on, and conflicts over, the oversight and regulation of mixed...
This study advances research on scandal through an empirical examination of one of the most extraord...
Much of the recent public outcry over the phone hacking scandal has been over the relative unaccount...
The Scandal in Academia is a large-scale fictional ethical case study of around 17,000 words and fou...
Bribery involves individuals exchanging material benefits for a service of a public institution. To ...
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to explore the origins of the Jimmy Savile Scandal in which th...
This article historically considers major public inquiries as an institution of the British regulato...