The Struggle Against Corruption: Progress at a Snail's Pace. Why?
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作者:
de Speville, Bertrand
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机构:
Independent Commiss Corrupt Hong Kong, Hong Kong, Hong Kong, Peoples R China
Speville & Associates, Richmond, Surrey, England
Council Europes Multidisciplinary Grp Corrupt, Strasbourg, FranceIndependent Commiss Corrupt Hong Kong, Hong Kong, Hong Kong, Peoples R China
de Speville, Bertrand
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机构:
[1] Independent Commiss Corrupt Hong Kong, Hong Kong, Hong Kong, Peoples R China
[2] Speville & Associates, Richmond, Surrey, England
[3] Council Europes Multidisciplinary Grp Corrupt, Strasbourg, France
In 2010 the author, in an article for this journal, questioned the methods put forward by the international donor community to overcome corruption in the transitional and developing countries of the world. Five years on, the progress against this scourge has been minimal. In this article the author explores some of the reasons why. Apart from the obvious reason, namely the failure of political will in the countries themselves, he outlines some of the policy and practical errors that continue to hinder the progress that could be made. Most of these errors are laid at the door of the international donor community, which perpetuates the remedies it advocates in spite of the evidence of failure. They range from a national anticorruption strategy that addresses corruption only in the public sector, to a policy of pursuing "grand corruption" but not "petty corruption" to insisting on an asset declaration system aimed at catching the corrupt and deterring others instead of aiming the system at identifying conflict of interest. These egregious errors, among others described in this article, are the direct cause of lack of progress against a problem internationally recognized as destructive of everything the affected countries are striving to build. In the author's view the errors can and should be corrected. The remedies are relatively simple.