This book examines the cases of implementation failure of the
Indonesian Anticorruption Law 1971 of the authoritarian New Order
regime, and of the Anticorruption Law 1999 of the democratic Reform
Order regime. It investigates to what extent and for what reasons
the implementation of these Laws failed to attain the policy
objectives of eradicating corruption in the public sector under the
two different political systems. The book concludes that combating
corruption in a developing country undergoing political transition
from an authoritarian to a democratic political system is
problematic and difficult. When corruption has systematically
infected and distorted the institutional structures and processes
of the government, in particular the law enforcement mechanisms,
implementing anticorruption laws is expected to be suboptimal and
subsequently fail. To overcome this problem, the factors
contributing to the policy implementation failure must be
eliminated.
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