ABSTRACT

With the advance of an increasingly globalized market, the opportunities for, and scale of, corruption is growing. The size of corporations and their wealth relative to nations provides the resources for corrupt practices. The liberalization of international financial markets makes transferring and hiding the proceeds of corruption easier. Moves towards privatization in East and West are providing once-only incentives for corruption on an unprecedented scale, as officials not only deal with the income of the state, but with its assets as well. In this book, Transparency International's (TI) world-renowned 'Corruption Perception Index' (CPI) and 'Bribery Perception Index' (BPI) are explained and examined by a group of experts. They set out to establish to what extent they are reliable measures of corruption and whether a series of surveys can measure changes in corruption and the effectiveness of anti-corruption strategies. The book contains a variety of expert contributions which deal with the complexity, difficulty and potential for measuring corruption as the key to developing effective strategies for combating it.

chapter Chapter 1|4 pages

Introduction

part I|182 pages

The Problem and Its Identification

chapter Chapter 2|38 pages

Measuring Corruption

chapter Chapter 3|12 pages

Corruption Definition and Measurement

chapter Chapter 6|30 pages

Measuring the Immeasurable

Boundaries and Functions of (Macro) Corruption Indices

chapter Chapter 7|32 pages

The Non-Perception Based Measurement of Corruption

A Review of Issues and Methods from a Policy Perspective

chapter Chapter 8|24 pages

Perceptions, Experience and Lies

What Measures Corruption and What do Corruption Measures Measure?

part II|107 pages

The Case Studies

chapter Chapter 9|14 pages

Corruption Indices for Russian Regions

chapter Chapter 10|18 pages

Corruption Risk Areas and Corruption Resistance

chapter Chapter 12|18 pages

Citizen Report Cards

chapter Chapter 13|14 pages

Corruption and Patronage Politics

‘Harambee' in Kenya

chapter Chapter 14|30 pages

Measuring Corruption

Exploring the Iceberg