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Corruption and American Politics (Hardcover, New)
Loot Price: R3,017
Discovery Miles 30 170
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Corruption and American Politics (Hardcover, New)
Series: Politics, Institutions, and Public Policy in America
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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From the days of Athenian democracy to the back rooms of Chicago
politics today, corruption has plagued all political systems for
all time. It is ubiquitous, vexing, and at times, threatens the
very fabric of society. No culture, no system of government, no
code of ethics has been able to eliminate political corruption.
While the United States generally ranks comparatively low in
measures of political corruption (Transparency International rates
the U.S. as the 18th "least" corrupt nation in the world, with
Denmark at number one, New Zealand, second, and Sweden third, the
U.K. 16, France 23, Spain 28, Israel 33, South Korea 40, Italy 55,
Cuba 65, with Somalia last at 180), yet it too continues to
confront the sting of political corruption. For something to count
as political corruption in the United States, it must have a public
impact, be a part of some violation of public trust. As such,
another useful distinction can be drawn between individual
corruption and systemic corruption. The former is individual
wrongdoing. An officeholder on the take, a legislator who sells his
vote, would be examples of "bad apples." Systemic corruption
encompasses a broader sphere. Instead of bad apples, here you have
a "bad system." The undermining of democratic legitimacy or
equality might be considered examples of systemic corruption, as
might campaign financing practices. Such corruption runs deeper
than mere individual transgression. Corruption is embedded into the
day-to-day operation of the system. In focusing on the individual,
we often overlook the systemic. It is easier, and in the short run,
more gratifying to catch, punish, and condemn an individual like
Governor Blagojevich. Yet what of the systemic forces that led the
governor to behave in such a manner? Is there undue systemic
pressure to accumulate money, so much so that the system pushes
politicians "over the edge"? A politician need not "sell" offices
to enter into a Faustian bargain. It may be perfectly legal to
collect campaign contributions, yet it may also have a corrosive or
corrupting effect on the integrity of the democratic process. With
so many issues of corruption swirling around in the current
American political climate, it is timely that there is new
scholarship that casts much-needed light on these systemic forces.
The brilliant discussions by a stellar list of distinguished
scholars, led by Michael A. Genovese and Victoria A. Farrar-Meyers,
in the insightful edited volume, Corruption and American Politics,
delivers the best and most up-to-date thinking by some of the
finest political minds in the nation. This will be an essential
resource for all collections in political science and American
studies.
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