ABSTRACT
First published in 1963, this study of corruption in the developing countries of Africa takes as its point of comparison Britain, pre-1880, as the authors question whether Britain’s experience in overcoming corruption can throw any light the means of overcoming corruption in contemporary developing countries.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |45 pages
Africa, Twentieth Century
chapter |3 pages
The Problem
chapter |19 pages
Glimpses of Corruption
chapter |13 pages
Tout Comprendre c'est Quelquechose Pardonner
chapter |6 pages
A Question of Loyalties
part |116 pages
Britain, Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries
chapter |8 pages
The Background
chapter |14 pages
Parliamentary Elections
chapter |10 pages
Influencing Members
chapter |11 pages
Administration and the Civil Service
chapter |12 pages
Local Government
chapter |10 pages
The Law
chapter |10 pages
The Armed Forces
chapter |9 pages
The Church
chapter |10 pages
Education
chapter |10 pages
Commerce and Industry
chapter |7 pages
Science
chapter |5 pages
The Victorian Middle Class
part |37 pages
Africa, Twentieth Century