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Diagnosing Corruption in Ethiopia - Perceptions, Realities, and the Way Forward for Key Sectors (Paperback)
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Diagnosing Corruption in Ethiopia - Perceptions, Realities, and the Way Forward for Key Sectors (Paperback)
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For decades, corruption in Ethiopia has only been discussed at the
margins. Perhaps because many have not experienced corruption as a
significant constraint to their lives and businesses, or perhaps
because a culture of circumspection has dampened open dialogue,
Ethiopia has neither seen the information flows nor the debate on
corruption that most other countries have seen in recent years.
This study attempts to fill this information gap. Conducted by the
World Bank (with financial support from the UK, the Netherlands and
Canada) in conjunction with the Federal Ethics and Anti-Corruption
Commission of Ethiopia (FEACC), the study is an independent
overview of corruption. It attempts to map the nature of corruption
in eight sectors in the country. The studies focuses on three key
objectives: (i) to develop sector frameworks that enable mapping of
the potential areas of corruption on a sector-by-sector basis; (ii)
to map the different forms, and types of corrupt practices in the
selected sectors; and (iii) to consider the higher risk areas and
identify appropriate sector or cross cutting responses for
Government and other stakeholders. The sectors covered are health,
education, water, justice, construction, land, telecommunications
and mining. In designing the methodologies for undertaking the
diagnostics, the sector experts developed approaches that most
suited the sector and stakeholder context. However, a number of
universal principles have guided the approach. One commonality in
the methodology has been the effort to tap into the perceptions and
knowledge of all stakeholders, be they politicians, senior
government officials, private sector businessmen, civil society
advocates or consumers of services. The diagnostics strongly
suggest that, in Ethiopia, corrupt practice in the delivery of
basic services is comparatively limited and is potentially much
lower than other low-income countries. When viewed together, the
findings of the study point towards an emerging pattern in sector
level corruption, with interesting variations in the levels of
corruption across the sectors studied.
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