In this comparative, historical survey of three East Asian countries, Jong-sung You explores how inequality hinders democratic control of corruption.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Jong-Sung You is Senior Lecturer at the Department of Political and Social Change, School of International, Political and Strategic Studies, ANU College of Asia and the Pacific, the Australian National University. His research has addressed the relationships between inequality, corruption and social trust, employing both cross-national quantitative studies and (comparative) case studies of Korea and East Asia. His research also attempts to provide new explanations for South Korea's political and economic development. His new research agenda includes freedom of expression and election campaign regulations in Korea and East Asia. His work has appeared in the American Sociological Review, Political Psychology, the Journal of East Asian Studies, and Trends and Prospects, and he has authored book chapters including a chapter on Korean development in a volume edited by Douglas North et al. He holds an MPA and PhD in public policy from Harvard University and a BA from Seoul National University. Before entering an academic career, he worked in the fields of democratization and social justice in South Korea. He has also worked for the Citizens' Coalition for Economic Justice as Director of Policy Research and later as General Secretary.
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgements 1. Introduction: the puzzles, arguments and methodology 2. Democracy, inequality and corruption: theory and hypotheses 3. Corruption in Korea, Taiwan and the Philippines: relative levels, trends and possible explanations 4. The genesis of inequality, land reforms and path dependence 5. Elections, clientelism and political corruption 6. Bureaucracy, patronage and bureaucratic corruption 7. Industrial policy, capture and corporate corruption 8. Cross-national evidence for generalizability 9. Conclusion Bibliography Index.
Acknowledgements 1. Introduction: the puzzles, arguments and methodology 2. Democracy, inequality and corruption: theory and hypotheses 3. Corruption in Korea, Taiwan and the Philippines: relative levels, trends and possible explanations 4. The genesis of inequality, land reforms and path dependence 5. Elections, clientelism and political corruption 6. Bureaucracy, patronage and bureaucratic corruption 7. Industrial policy, capture and corporate corruption 8. Cross-national evidence for generalizability 9. Conclusion Bibliography Index.
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