Measuring Corruption Victimization and Strengthening Corruption Cleanup in Developing Countries: What Has Worked for Anti-Corruption Reforms and What Has Not Worked in Africa

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Date
2020
Authors
Adisa, W.B.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
IGI Global
Abstract
Corruption is one of the greatest challenges of development in developing countries particularly in Africa where the state is run like a personal enterprise. Since the end of the Cold war, the international community has shown considerable interest in the study and control of corruption in developing societies leading to billions of dollars investments in anticorruption cleanups. This chapter argues that although there has been considerable success in the measurement of corruption using corruption perception index, BEEPS, PETS, case studies, and direct observation, and despite the sub rosa nature of the problem, only marginal success has been achieved in measuring corruption victimization in many of these societies. The consequence of this is a lack of synergy between corruption victimization data sets and anti-corruption programs.
Description
Staff publications
Keywords
Corruption , Developing countries , Africa , Cold war , Research Subject Categories::SOCIAL SCIENCES::Social sciences::Sociology
Citation
Adisa, W. B. (2020). Measuring Corruption Victimization and Strengthening Corruption Cleanup in Developing Countries: What Has Worked for Anti-Corruption Reforms and What Has Not Worked in Africa. In Global Perspectives on Victimization Analysis and Prevention (pp. 76-95). IGI Global.