Democratisation, economic development and corruption in East-Central Europe: a 11-nation-study
Contributor(s)
Institut für Höhere Studien (IHS), WienKeywords
Sociology & anthropologyPolitical science
Politikwissenschaft
Soziologie, Anthropologie
Macrosociology, Analysis of Whole Societies
Political Process, Elections, Political Sociology, Political Culture
Soziologie von Gesamtgesellschaften
politische Willensbildung, politische Soziologie, politische Kultur
Politikverdrossenheit
Kapitalismus
Marktwirtschaft
Wirtschaftskriminalität
Wirtschaftswachstum
postkommunistische Gesellschaft
politische Kriminalität
Demokratisierung
Bevölkerung
Korruption
Ostmitteleuropa
economic growth
democratization
capitalism
population
post-communist society
market economy
dissatisfaction with politics
East Central Europe
white-collar criminality
political criminality
corruption
empirisch
empirisch-quantitativ
empirical
quantitative empirical
Full record
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http://www.ssoar.info/ssoar/handle/document/22180Abstract
'Die Studie untersucht die Beziehung zwischen Korruption - gemessen als subjektiver Indikator in international-vergleichenden Umfragen - und anderen Indikatoren wie Wirtschaftswachstum, Demokratisierung, Institutionalisierung, zunehmende persönliche Freiheiten und die informelle Ökonomie als wichtige Indikatoren des Wandels im postkommunistischen Zentral- und Osteuropa. Die Autoren fanden eine starke negative Korrelation zwischen subjektiven Korruptions-Wahrnehmungen einerseits und wirtschaftlichem Wachstum andererseits: je höher das wahrgenommene Niveau der Korruption, desto niedriger war das Niveau des Wirtschaftswachstums. Es war auch klar erkennbar, dass eine Gesellschaft, die offener, freier und demokratischer ist, auch ein deutlich geringeres Korruptionsniveau aufwies. Diese Analyse beruht auf einer akademisch-vergleichenden Umfragestudie mit 12.643 persönlichen Interviews im Jahre 1998 in folgenden Ländern: Belarus, Bulgarien, Bundesrepublik Yugoslawien, Kroatien, Polen, Rumänien, Tschechien, Slowakei, Slowenien, Ukraine und Ungarn.' (Autorenreferat)'The study explores the relationship between corruption (as measured in a cross-national sample survey) and other indicators such as economic growth, democratisation, institutionalisation, increasing freedom and the informal economy as important indicators of change in post-communist Eastern and Central Europe. It was found that corruption perceptions are very highly correlated with economic growth: the higher the level of corruption, the lower the level of growth. It was also the case the more free and democratic a society was (that is, the more open) the less corruption was perceived. The analysis is based upon a representative sample survey carried out in Poland, Hungary, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Slovenia, Croatia, FRY, Romania, Bulgaria, Belarus and Ukraine in 1998 (N=12643).' (author's abstract)|
Date
2011-02-23Type
ArbeitspapierIdentifier
oai:gesis.izsoz.de:document/22180http://www.ssoar.info/ssoar/handle/document/22180
urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-221805
Copyright/License
Deposit Licence - Keine Weiterverbreitung, keine BearbeitungCollections
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