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Comparative anti-corruption policy: the American, Soviet and Russian cases

By: Clark, William A.
Contributor(s): Jos, Philip H.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticlePublisher: 2000Description: p.101-48.Subject(s): Corruption - United States | Corruption - Russia | Corruption In: International Journal of Public AdministrationSummary: In light of significant conceptual and methodological difficulties that face comparative corruption research, we propose to treat comparative anti-corruption policy as worthy of study in its own right. By using measures of enforcement activity as evidence of anti-corruption, rather than flawed proxy measures of corruption, we endeavor to surmount some of obstacles to comparing radically different political systems. We compare anti-corruption activity in the US and the USSR and elaborate three theoretical perspectives - emphasizing political, institutional, and symbolic factors - and show how each might improve our understanding of anti-corruption policy in the two nations. By applying these three frameworks to the Russian republic, we assess anti-corruption policy in an unsettled, emerging political system and suggest that the dynamics that underlie Russia's anti-corruption policy will more closely resemble US policy than was the case in the USSR. - Reproduced
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Articles Articles Indian Institute of Public Administration
Volume no: 23, Issue no: 1 Available AR44884

In light of significant conceptual and methodological difficulties that face comparative corruption research, we propose to treat comparative anti-corruption policy as worthy of study in its own right. By using measures of enforcement activity as evidence of anti-corruption, rather than flawed proxy measures of corruption, we endeavor to surmount some of obstacles to comparing radically different political systems. We compare anti-corruption activity in the US and the USSR and elaborate three theoretical perspectives - emphasizing political, institutional, and symbolic factors - and show how each might improve our understanding of anti-corruption policy in the two nations. By applying these three frameworks to the Russian republic, we assess anti-corruption policy in an unsettled, emerging political system and suggest that the dynamics that underlie Russia's anti-corruption policy will more closely resemble US policy than was the case in the USSR. - Reproduced

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