Who blames corruption for the poor enforcement of environmental laws? Survey evidence from Brazil

被引:25
|
作者
Aklin M. [1 ]
Bayer P. [2 ]
Harish S.P. [1 ]
Urpelainen J. [3 ]
机构
[1] Department of Politics, New York University, NY, NY, 10012, 19 West 4th Street, Second Floor
[2] Department of Political Science, University of Mannheim, 68131 Mannheim
[3] Department of Political Science, Columbia University, NY, NY, 10027, 712 IAB
关键词
Brazil; Corruption; Environment; Latin America; Public Opinion;
D O I
10.1007/s10018-014-0076-z
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Who blames corruption for the poor enforcement of environmental laws? The answer to this question is important since corruption is an important reason why environmental policies are not properly enforced, but previous studies of environmental public opinion do not address the issue. We analyze data from a survey fielded in Brazil in June 2012, immediately preceding the Rio+20 environmental summit. We test hypotheses on income, education, and perception of corruption as a cause of poor enforcement of environmental policy. We find that wealthy individuals are more likely to associate corruption with enforcement failure than their poorer counterparts. However, education is not associated with the belief that corruption is a primary cause of enforcement failure. These results suggest that since wealthy Brazilians have a higher exposure to corruption because of their interaction with government officials, they understand the role of corruption in policy failure. Conversely, the kind of general information that education offers does not raise concern about the role of corruption in environmental policy. The results have important implications particularly in democratic societies, where governments have stronger incentives to address the problem if the concerned public associates corruption with enforcement failure. © 2014 Springer Japan.
引用
收藏
页码:241 / 262
页数:21
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Vulnerability to tax enforcement and spillovers of corruption: cross-industry evidence from China
    Chen, Shawn Xiaoguang
    [J]. JOURNAL OF LAW ECONOMICS & ORGANIZATION, 2022, 40 (02): : 289 - 337
  • [22] Corruption and Confidence in Public Institutions: Evidence from a Global Survey
    Clausen, Bianca
    Kraay, Aart
    Nyiri, Zsolt
    [J]. WORLD BANK ECONOMIC REVIEW, 2011, 25 (02): : 212 - 249
  • [23] Public environmental enforcement and private lender monitoring: Evidence from environmental covenants
    Choy, Stacey
    Jiang, Shushu
    Liao, Scott
    Wang, Emma
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ACCOUNTING & ECONOMICS, 2024, 77 (2-3):
  • [24] Do Female Politicians Face Stronger Backlash for Corruption Allegations? Evidence from Survey-Experiments in Brazil and Mexico
    Frederico Batista Pereira
    [J]. Political Behavior, 2021, 43 : 1561 - 1580
  • [25] The effect of enforcement on timely loss recognition: Evidence from insider trading laws
    Jayaraman, Sudarshan
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ACCOUNTING & ECONOMICS, 2012, 53 (1-2): : 77 - 97
  • [26] WAGES AND EARNINGS IN LATE MEDIEVAL ENGLAND - EVIDENCE FROM THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LABOR LAWS
    PENN, SAC
    DYER, C
    [J]. ECONOMIC HISTORY REVIEW, 1990, 43 (03): : 356 - 376
  • [27] Do Female Politicians Face Stronger Backlash for Corruption Allegations? Evidence from Survey-Experiments in Brazil and Mexico
    Batista Pereira, Frederico
    [J]. POLITICAL BEHAVIOR, 2021, 43 (04) : 1561 - 1580
  • [28] Environmental enforcement and compliance in developing countries: Evidence from India
    Gupta, Shreekant
    Saksena, Shalini
    Baris, Omer F.
    [J]. WORLD DEVELOPMENT, 2019, 117 : 313 - 327
  • [29] Perceptions of minimum age at marriage laws and their enforcement: qualitative evidence from Malawi
    Melnikas, Andrea J.
    Mulauzi, Nancy
    Mkandawire, James
    Amin, Sajeda
    [J]. BMC PUBLIC HEALTH, 2021, 21 (01)
  • [30] Perceptions of minimum age at marriage laws and their enforcement: qualitative evidence from Malawi
    Andrea J. Melnikas
    Nancy Mulauzi
    James Mkandawire
    Sajeda Amin
    [J]. BMC Public Health, 21