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Approaches to corruption: a synthesis of the scholarship

Approaches to corruption: a synthesis of the scholarship
Approaches to corruption: a synthesis of the scholarship
The scholarly literature on corruption has developed in separate disciplines, each of which has produced important insights, but each of which also has some crucial limitations. We bring these existing approaches together, and then we confront them against an ethnographic literature on corruption that over the last two decades has become extensive, but has never before been synthesized into an overarching framework. We argue that any corruption reform must meet three challenges. First, corruption persists because people need to engage in corruption to meet their needs. This is the resource challenge. Second, corruption persists because there is uncertainty over what constitutes a gift and what constitutes a bribe, as well as confusion over what is private and what is public. This is the definitional challenge. And third, corruption persists because of pressure to behave in ways that are considered moral according to alternative criteria, such as taking care of one’s kin, or standing up to legacies of racism and oppression. This is the alternative moralities challenge. We examine the strengths and weaknesses of existing approaches to corruption in meeting these three challenges.
0039-3606
96-132
Prasad, Monica
add8df6f-6126-4e25-ba0b-6eb1f926f271
Borges, Mariana
ea921c95-b54f-4a2f-928c-3d5b19ad07c2
Nickow, Andre
599ad832-83f1-4a90-8995-106648274ccc
Prasad, Monica
add8df6f-6126-4e25-ba0b-6eb1f926f271
Borges, Mariana
ea921c95-b54f-4a2f-928c-3d5b19ad07c2
Nickow, Andre
599ad832-83f1-4a90-8995-106648274ccc

Prasad, Monica, Borges, Mariana and Nickow, Andre (2018) Approaches to corruption: a synthesis of the scholarship. Studies in Comparative International Development, 54, 96-132. (doi:10.1007/s12116-018-9275-0).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The scholarly literature on corruption has developed in separate disciplines, each of which has produced important insights, but each of which also has some crucial limitations. We bring these existing approaches together, and then we confront them against an ethnographic literature on corruption that over the last two decades has become extensive, but has never before been synthesized into an overarching framework. We argue that any corruption reform must meet three challenges. First, corruption persists because people need to engage in corruption to meet their needs. This is the resource challenge. Second, corruption persists because there is uncertainty over what constitutes a gift and what constitutes a bribe, as well as confusion over what is private and what is public. This is the definitional challenge. And third, corruption persists because of pressure to behave in ways that are considered moral according to alternative criteria, such as taking care of one’s kin, or standing up to legacies of racism and oppression. This is the alternative moralities challenge. We examine the strengths and weaknesses of existing approaches to corruption in meeting these three challenges.

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Published date: 21 August 2018

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 501088
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/501088
ISSN: 0039-3606
PURE UUID: 31eee024-dc8a-421c-acc5-8e21557da0c4
ORCID for Mariana Borges: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2690-5006

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Date deposited: 23 May 2025 16:40
Last modified: 28 Oct 2025 03:06

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Contributors

Author: Monica Prasad
Author: Mariana Borges ORCID iD
Author: Andre Nickow

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