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Corruption is bad: normative dimensions of the anti-corruption movement

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Author(s)
Bukovansky, Mlada
Keywords
corruption
anti-corruption measures
corrupt practices
political corruption
public administration
UN
United Nations
International Monetary Fund
IMF
World Bank
private sector
OECD
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
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URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/94703
Online Access
http://hdl.handle.net/1885/40136
http://digitalcollections.anu.edu.au/handle/1885/40136
Abstract
Informed by a recent wave of academic and policy research, international organisations such as the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, and the OECD are increasingly attempting to incorporate anti-corruption measures into their respective missions. But while the concept of corruption makes little sense in the absence of a parametric normative distinction between that which properly belongs to the public sphere and that which belongs to the private or commercial sphere, there has been little effort by policy makers or students of international political economy to explicitly articulate and reflect upon the moral and ethical underpinnings of the concept of corruption. This paper reviews some of the key documents of the emerging global anti-corruption regime, and analyses the moral connotations permeating these documents. I also examine the relative neglect of moral and ethical issues within the scholarly literature on corruption and its consequences. Such neglect, I argue, is likely to undercut the legitimacy, and hence efficacy, of international institutional efforts to combat corruption.
Date
2003-09-03
Type
Working/Technical Paper
Identifier
oai:openresearch-repository.anu.edu.au:1885/40136
http://hdl.handle.net/1885/40136
http://digitalcollections.anu.edu.au/handle/1885/40136
Collections
Corruption and Transparency Collection

entitlement

 

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