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Corruption, Party, and Government in Britain, 1702-1713 (Hardcover)
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Corruption, Party, and Government in Britain, 1702-1713 (Hardcover)
Series: Oxford Historical Monographs
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Corruption, Party, and Government in Britain, 1702-1713 offers an
innovative and original reinterpretation of state formation in
eighteenth-century Britain, reconceptualising it as a political and
fundamentally partisan process. Focussing on the supply of funds to
the army during the War of the Spanish Succession (1702-13), it
demonstrates that public officials faced multiple incompatible
demands, but that political partisanship helped to prioritise them,
and to hammer out settlements that embodied a version of the
national interest. These decisions were then transmitted to agents
in overseas through a mixture of personal incentives and partisan
loyalties which built trust and turned these informal networks into
instruments of public policy. However, the process of building
trust and supplying funds laid officials and agents open to
accusations of embezzlement, fraud and financial misappropriation.
In particular, although successive financial officials ran
entrepreneurial private financial ventures that enabled the army
overseas to avoid dangerous financial shortfalls, they found it
necessary to cover the costs and risks by receiving illegal
'gratifications' from the regiments. Reconstructing these
transactions in detail, this book demonstrates that these corrupt
payments advanced the public service, and thus that 'corruption'
was as much a dispute over ends as means. Ultimately, this volume
demonstrates that state formation in eighteenth-century Britain was
a contested process of interest aggregation, in which common
partisan aims helped to negotiate compromises between various
irreconcilable public priorities and private interests, within the
frameworks provided by formal institutions, and then
collaboratively imposed through overlapping and intersecting
networks of formal and informal agents.
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