1. Introduction: scale and focus in the study of corruption, Paul M Heywood
Section 1: Understanding corruption
2. The definition of political corruption, Mark Philp
3. Definitions of corruption, Oskar Kurer
4. The meaning of corruption in democracies, Mark Warren
5. The contradictions of corruption in Nigeria, Daniel J Smith
6. Criminal Entrepreneurship: a political economy of corruption and organised crime in India, Andrew Sanchez Section 2: Causes
7. Causes of corruption, Bo Rothstein and Jan Teorrell
8. What does cross-national empirical research reveal about the causes of corruption?, Daniel Triesman
9. Bureaucracy and corruption, Carl Dahlström
10. Sources of corruption in the European Union, Carolyn Warner Section 3: Measurment
11. Measuring corruption, Paul M Heywood
12. The Silence of Corruption: Identifying Underreporting of Business Corruption through Randomized Response Techniques, Nathan Jensen and Aminur Rahman
13. Corruption and the problem of perception, Jonathan Rose
14. The ethnographic study of corruption: methodology and research focuses, Davide Torsello
Section 4: Consequences
15. The consequences of corruption, Eric Uslaner
16. Corruption in Latin America: A View from the AmericasBarometer, Mitchell A Seligson and Brian M Faughnan
17. Corruption and development: the mutable edges of morality in modern markets, Sarah Bracking
18. Institutional design and anti-corruption in mainland China, Melanie Manion
19. The political economy of conflicts of interest in an era of public-private governance, Staffan Andersson and Frank Anechiarico Section 5: New directions
20. Reflection and Reassessment: The Emerging Agenda of Corruption Research, Michael Johnston
21. Gender and corruption, Lena Wängnerud
22. Behavioral and Institutional Economics as an Inspiration to Anticorruption - Some Counterintuitive Findings, Johann Graf Lambsdorff
23. Religion, Ethics and Corruption: Field Evidence from India and Nigeria, Heather Marquette
24. The threats to sports and sports governance from betting-related corruption: causes and solutions, David Forrest and Wolfgang Maennig
25. Freedom of information and corruption, Ben Worthy and Tom Mclean
Paul M. Heywood is Sir Francis Hill Professor of European Politics and Executive Dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences at the University of Nottingham, UK. Between 2003 and 2009 he was co-editor of the international journal Government and Opposition, and is currently Chair of the Board of Directors. He is author, co-author or editor of fourteen books and more than eighty journal articles and book chapters. His research focuses on political corruption, institutional design and state capacity in contemporary Europe. In 2006, he was appointed Adjunct Professor at the University of Hunan (China), where he is Senior Adviser to the Anti-Corruption Research Center. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences, and a Fellow of the Leadership Foundation for Higher Education.
This is a well-constructed, thought-provoking, and complete
overview of and engagement with the corruption field, something
that Routledge handbooks are deservedly recognized for. While some
of the contributions can be quite dense and challenging, corruption
as a field of study is more oriented to advanced undergraduates and
graduate students. Thus, the selections are appropriate and likely
to maintain relevance for the long term. The book also takes some
novel approaches that pay off in terms of conceptual organization:
it does not use the standard division of "definitions" and "cases,"
but evolves beyond that to include the vastly undervalued but
direly needed "measurements" and "consequences." By fluidly and
compellingly fusing case studies into these broader rubrics, the
overall impact of the volume increases for students and researchers
alike. Finally, the concluding section, "New Directions," takes on
some fairly innovative studies of corruption that could become a
leading edge for future research within the discipline.
Consequently, students of corruption get the foundation and the
future in this one handy volume. A welcome addition.
--M. D. Crosston, Bellevue UniversitySumming Up: Highly
recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above.
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