ABSTRACT

The purpose of this book is to understand the rise, future and implications of two important new kinds of "integrity warriors" - official anti-corruption agencies (ACAs) and anti-corruption NGOs – and to locate them in a wider context and history of anti-corruption activity.

Key issues of corruption and anti-corruption are discussed in an integrated and innovative way; through a number of country studies including Taiwan and South Korea, South East Europe, Fiji, Russia and the Baltic States. Some of the questions, used to examine the development of new anti-corruption actors, include:

  • In what context were these born?
  • How do they operate in pursuing their mission and mandate?
  • How successful have they been in relation to expected results?
  • To what extent are governmental and non governmental actors aware of each other and how far do they cooperate towards the common goal of fighting corruption?
  • What explains the shift in emphasis after the end of the cold war, from national to international action?

Governments, NGOs and Anti-Corruption will be of interest to students and scholars of corruption, public policy, political science, developmental studies and law.

 

Luís de Sousa is an Associate Researcher at CIES-ISCTE, Portugal and Calouste Gulbenkian Fellow at the European University Institute, Italy.

Barry Hindess is Emeritus Professor of Political Science at the Australian National University, Australia.

Peter Larmour is a Reader in Public Policy and Governance at the Crawford School of Economics and Government, Australian National University, Australia.

part |45 pages

Theories and concepts

chapter |18 pages

Anti-corruption as a risk to democracy

On the unintended consequences of international anti-corruption campaigns

chapter |11 pages

The development of inspection and oversight

Blind alleys and open vistas in the case of American procurement policy

part |70 pages

The vices and virtues of governmental anti-corruption

chapter |20 pages

Matching workload, management and resources

Setting the context for ‘effective' anti-corruption commissions

chapter |17 pages

Anti-corruption bodies as discourse-controlling instruments

Experiences from south-east Europe

chapter |18 pages

Warriors in chains

Institutional legacies and anti-corruption programmes in Taiwan and South Korea

chapter |13 pages

Populist anti-corruption and military coups

The clean-up campaign in Fiji 2006–07

part |82 pages

The vices and virtues of non-governmental anti-corruption

chapter |17 pages

Transnational anti-corruption advocacy

A multi-level analysis of civic action in Russia

chapter |16 pages

How do international organizations scrutinize transforming states?

The case of Transparency International and the Baltic states

chapter |23 pages

TI in search of a constituency

The institutionalization and franchising of the global anti-corruption doctrine