ABSTRACT

When and to what extent external actors, especially the EU, contribute to induce legal and administrative changes and help domestic authorities address the disconnect between good governance standards and corrupt practices? Comparing external promotion of anti-corruption norms and provisions in civil administration, public finance management and public procurement in Turkey this book identifies the domestic conditions under which external actors can affect real-world outcomes. Providing a comprehensive, empirical account of Turkey’s fight against corruption, the book’s cross-sectoral analysis explores the power relations between major political actors and bureaucratic state elites, and examines how structural administrative factors filter external pressure for anti-corruption reforms and determine the prospects for institutional change in the Turkish public sector. This welcome addition to literature on Europeanisation and external good governance promotion makes an important contribution to the academic and policy debate regarding the "politics" of anti-corruption reforms in Turkey.

chapter 1|13 pages

Introduction

chapter 5|24 pages

Initial misfit and institutional change in Turkey’s fight against corruption

Mapping divergent outcomes in the public sector

chapter 6|25 pages

Turkey’s fight against corruption

External incentives and domestic politics

chapter 7|21 pages

Europeanisation and good (and bad) governance in Turkey

A cross-sectoral assessment in the public sector

chapter 8|10 pages

Concluding remarks

chapter |3 pages

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