Comparing Political Corruption and Clientelism

Copertina anteriore
Junichi Kawata
Routledge, 2 mar 2017 - 248 pagine
Past modernization literature has assumed that corruption and clientelism reflect a pre-modern social structure and could be referred to as a pathologic phenomenon of the political system. Very few have considered corruption and clientelism as structural products of an interwoven connection between capital accumulation, bureaucratic rationalization, interest intermediation and political participation from below. This volume analyzes key aspects of the debate such as: should corruption and clientelism be evaluated as a 'lubricant' in terms of administrative efficiency - legitimate demands from the margins of society to redress social and economic inequality or to readdress economic development? What would be the effect of strengthening policing to control political corruption? Could electoral reform or a decentralization of government power be a cure for all? These questions among others are answered in this comprehensive volume.

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Sommario

List of Figures
1858
Preface
1866
Neostructuralism
1880
A Typology of Corrupt Networks
1916
Multilevel
1979
Internal Party Organization in the Italian Christian
The End of the ConservativeReformist Era and
Mafia Corrupted Violence and Incivism
The Long Life of Clientelism in Southern Italy
The Development of Political Clientelism in 20thcentury
Index

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Informazioni sull'autore (2017)

Junichi Kawata is Professor of Political Science in the Graduate School of Law and Politics at Osaka University, Osaka, Japan.

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