Confronting Corruption (eBook, ePUB)
Past Concerns, Present Challenges, and Future Strategies
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Confronting Corruption (eBook, ePUB)
Past Concerns, Present Challenges, and Future Strategies
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Corruption undermines nearly all key legal and developmental priorities today, including the effective functioning of democratic institutions and honest elections; environmental protection; human rights and human security; international development programs; and fair competition for global trade and investment. This book chronicles the global anticorruption steps taken since the movement advanced after the end of the Cold War. It provides a realistic assessment of the present state of affairs by critically evaluating what existing anticorruption programs and treaties have accomplished and…mehr
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- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 408
- Erscheinungstermin: 2. November 2017
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9780190458362
- Artikelnr.: 53238321
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 408
- Erscheinungstermin: 2. November 2017
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9780190458362
- Artikelnr.: 53238321
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
* Acknowledgments
* Abbreviations
* Part I: Setting the Scene
* CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION
* 1 FIFA, a criminal organization?
* 2 The Malaysian Wealth Fund '1MDB'
* 3 Panama Papers
* CHAPTER 2: WHY THE GROWING CONCERN ABOUT CORRUPTION?
* 1 Present at the Creation
* 2 Putting Corruption on the International Agenda
* 3 Need for Action
* 4 Reasons for Continuing Resistance
* 5 Growth of Anti-corruption Capability
* 6 Expansion of Global Economy
* 7 Digital Communications
* CHAPTER 3: THE POLITICS OF ANTI-CORRUPTION
* 1 Transparency International and Its Politics
* 2 International Organizations
* a OECD
* b UNODC
* c G20
* d World Bank
* e International Chamber of Commerce
* f FIFA
* 3 Governments
* a United States
* b UK
* c Nordic Countries
* d China
* e Bangladesh
* 4 Role of Media
* 5 Growth of Anticorruption Movement
* 6 Government Departments
* 7 Private Industry
* 8 NGOs
* 9 Professional Organizations
* 10 Universities
* 11 Illicit Activities
* 12 Major Political Influences
* a Tone at the Top
* b Power of the Legal Establishment
* c Role of Civil Society
* d People Power
* e Counter Actions
* CHAPTER 4: WHAT IS CORRUPTION?
* 1 A 'cancer' to be rooted out?
* 2 Giving and taking
* 3 Legal definitions
* 4 Corruption comes in different forms
* 5 A systemic perspective
* 6 What is the common denominator?
* 7 Are we sure that corruption is harmful?
* 8 How big is the problem?
* 9 Why have we chosen to fight corruption now?
* 10 Are we making a difference?
* Part II: Drivers of Change
* CHAPTER 5: EVOLUTION OF TRANSPARENCY INTERNATIONAL
* 1 Peter Eigen and the World Bank
* 2 The Genesis of TI
* 3 Organizing TI
* a Meeting with Amnesty International
* b Organization Meeting at Dutch Foreign Ministry
* c Berlin Launch Conference
* d Ecuador Meeting
* e Jeremy Pope becomes Managing Director
* f Growth of National Chapter Network
* g Publication of TI Index
* 4 Conventions Advocacy
* a OECD Convention
* b TI Progress Reports on Enforcement
* c United Nations Convention against Corruption
* d Evolution of TI Management
* e The 2005 Election
* CHAPTER 6: THE UNITED STATES: FOREIGN CORRUPT PRACTICES ACT AND
CAMPAIGN FINANCING
* 1 Colonial Heritage
* 2 Constitutional Debates
* 3 Yazoo Controversy
* 4 Passage of 14th Amendment
* 5 Construction of Panama Canal
* 6 Watergate
* 7 Foreign Corrupt Practices Act
* 8 Citizens United Case
* CHAPTER 7: BRIBING FOREIGN OFFICIALS: THE OECD ANTI-CORRUPTION
INSTRUMENTS
* 1 Is bribery a necessary evil?
* 2 The US Foreign Corrupt Practices Act
* 3 The initiative and first steps in the OECD
* 4 The 1994 Recommendation and the Follow-up
* 5 Implementing the Convention
* 6 The crisis
* 7 Overcoming the crisis: the UK Bribery Act 2010
* 8 Uneven application
* 9 Further challenges
* 10 A new step forward: the 2009 Recommendation
* 11 A final positive experience
* 12 Conclusion
* CHAPTER 8: THE UN CONVENTION AGAINST CORRUPTION
* 1 Global Significance
* 2 The Politics of UNCAC
* 3 The United Nations Convention against Corruption: anti-corruption's
expanding frontier
* a Overview of the United Nations Convention Against Corruption
* b Provisions directly affecting international business
* c Strengthening national integrity systems
* d The implementation review mechanism
* Part III: Pervasive Trouble Spots
* CHAPTER 9: BANKING AND FINANCE
* 1 Grand corruption and money flows
* 2 A new topic altogether
* 3 Expansion
* 4 Current status of rules against corruption-money laundering
* 5 Asset Recovery
* 6 Is Asset Recovery working?
* 7 Conclusion
* CHAPTER 10: EXTRACTIVE INDUSTRIES
* 1 The 'resource curse'
* 2 Publish what you pay
* 3 The Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative
* 4 The struggle for regulation
* a United States: Section 1504 of the Dodd-Frank Act
* b EU: revision of its Transparency and Bookkeeping Directives
* 5 Regulating trading?
* 6 Collective action as a way forward?
* CHAPTER 11: INFRASTRUCTURE AND CONSTRUCTION
* 1 The risks
* 2 What needs to be done?
* CHAPTER 12: AERONAUTICS AND DEFENSE
* 1 What are the particular risks in defense procurement?
* 2 The key role of defense offsets
* 3 Specific corruption risk related to offsets
* 4 How to prevent corruption in the defense industries?
* CHAPTER 13: THE ART MARKET
* 1 Challenges
* 2 Self-regulation?
* 3 International law?
* CHAPTER 14: THE PHARMACEUTICAL INDUSTRY
* 1 Challenges
* 2 What needs to be done?
* CHAPTER 15: SPORTS GOVERNING BODIES: THE FIFA EXPERIENCE
* 1 Emotions and big business
* 2 Multinational enterprises and quasi-intergovernmental organizations
* 3 Old Boys suddenly becoming rich
* 4 FIFA a company in trouble or a criminal organization?
* 5 The responsibility of the host country
* 6 What's wrong with self-regulation?
* 7 Example FIFA
* 8 International regulation
* 9 What is on the current reform list?
* CHAPTER 16: DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE
* 1 Its logic
* 2 Is development assistance effective?
* 3 Donor interest
* 4 Tolerating embezzlement?
* 5 Is there a way out of the dilemma?
* 6 Oil-for-Food
* a The official Programme
* b Planned Distribution of Oil Proceeds
* c What went wrong?
* d Oil Surcharges - Flow of Funds
* e Humanitarian Contract Kickbacks - Flow of Funds
* f Illicit Income Received by Iraq under the Programme
* 7 The Contribution of the IFIs
* Part IV: Criminal Law and other Forms of Regulation
* CHAPTER 17: STRENGTHS AND LIMITATIONS OF CRIMINAL LAW
* 1 Is criminal law really that essential to combating bribery?
* 2 Who is a 'foreign public official'?
* 3 What about the eternal 'facilitation payments'?
* 4 Individuals versus corporate liability
* 5 Watch your agents!
* 6 The proof is in the pudding
* 7 Are prosecutors and courts out of their depths?
* 8 Do we need a Supranational Criminal Court for large scale
corruption?
* CHAPTER 18: BEYOND CRIMINAL LAW: ADMINISTRATIVE SANCTIONS AND
PREVENTIVE MEASURES
* 1 Regulatory sanctions
* 2 Debarment by MDBs
* 3 Automatic debarment?
* 4 Is debarment always the best solution?
* 5 Dealing with corruption in arbitration procedures
* 6 Prevention
* Part V: Private Sector Responses
* CHAPTER 19: PRIVATE SECTOR RESPONSE TO CORRUPTION
* 1 Major Trends
* 2 Evolution of Compliance
* a Role of NGOs
* b UN Global Compact
* c Industry Sector Initiatives: Wolfsberg
* d Other Industry Sector Initiatives
* Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI)
* Construction Sector Transparency (CoST)
* Aerospace and Defense (IFBEC)
* 3 Common Problem Areas
* a Gifts, Entertainment and Travel Expenses
* b Lobbyists and Sales Representatives
* c Political Contributions
* d Avoiding Extortion
* e Private-to-Private Bribery
* f Facilitation Payments
* g Foreign Subsidiaries and Joint Ventures
* 4 Psychology of Corrupt Conduct
* a Type A
* b Type B
* c Type C
* 5 Factors Needed to Influence Corporate Culture
* a Tone at the top is important
* b Transparent Rules
* c Leadership selection
* 6 Moving Anti-corruption to the Next Level
* CHAPTER 20: COLLECTIVE ACTION
* 1 Why collective action?
* 2 From an academic think piece to a practical solution
* 3 What is collective action?
* 4 Is collective action really necessary?
* Part VI: Moving Forward
* CHAPTER 21: WHAT HAVE WE ACHIEVED?
* 1 Achievements and challenges
* 2 Accomplishments
* 3 Challenges
* CHAPTER 22: GLOBALIZATION AND DIGITAL REVOLUTION
* 1 Globalization
* a Globalization of Corruption
* b Impact of Globalization on Law Enforcement
* 2 Digital Revolution
* a Cyber Forensics
* b Digital Initiatives
* c The Political Impact
* d Awareness Raising
* CHAPTER 23: DIFFERENT STRATEGIES FOR DIFFERENT COUNTRIES
* 1 Countries with Strong Democratic Institutions
* 2 Countries with Weaker Democratic Institutions
* 3 Countries with Autocratic Governments
* a Working with China
* b Working with Russia
* c The Arab Spring and its Implications for the Middle East and North
Africa
* 4 Failed States
* 5 Long-Term Strategy Perspective
* Bibliography
* Index
* Acknowledgments
* Abbreviations
* Part I: Setting the Scene
* CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION
* 1 FIFA, a criminal organization?
* 2 The Malaysian Wealth Fund '1MDB'
* 3 Panama Papers
* CHAPTER 2: WHY THE GROWING CONCERN ABOUT CORRUPTION?
* 1 Present at the Creation
* 2 Putting Corruption on the International Agenda
* 3 Need for Action
* 4 Reasons for Continuing Resistance
* 5 Growth of Anti-corruption Capability
* 6 Expansion of Global Economy
* 7 Digital Communications
* CHAPTER 3: THE POLITICS OF ANTI-CORRUPTION
* 1 Transparency International and Its Politics
* 2 International Organizations
* a OECD
* b UNODC
* c G20
* d World Bank
* e International Chamber of Commerce
* f FIFA
* 3 Governments
* a United States
* b UK
* c Nordic Countries
* d China
* e Bangladesh
* 4 Role of Media
* 5 Growth of Anticorruption Movement
* 6 Government Departments
* 7 Private Industry
* 8 NGOs
* 9 Professional Organizations
* 10 Universities
* 11 Illicit Activities
* 12 Major Political Influences
* a Tone at the Top
* b Power of the Legal Establishment
* c Role of Civil Society
* d People Power
* e Counter Actions
* CHAPTER 4: WHAT IS CORRUPTION?
* 1 A 'cancer' to be rooted out?
* 2 Giving and taking
* 3 Legal definitions
* 4 Corruption comes in different forms
* 5 A systemic perspective
* 6 What is the common denominator?
* 7 Are we sure that corruption is harmful?
* 8 How big is the problem?
* 9 Why have we chosen to fight corruption now?
* 10 Are we making a difference?
* Part II: Drivers of Change
* CHAPTER 5: EVOLUTION OF TRANSPARENCY INTERNATIONAL
* 1 Peter Eigen and the World Bank
* 2 The Genesis of TI
* 3 Organizing TI
* a Meeting with Amnesty International
* b Organization Meeting at Dutch Foreign Ministry
* c Berlin Launch Conference
* d Ecuador Meeting
* e Jeremy Pope becomes Managing Director
* f Growth of National Chapter Network
* g Publication of TI Index
* 4 Conventions Advocacy
* a OECD Convention
* b TI Progress Reports on Enforcement
* c United Nations Convention against Corruption
* d Evolution of TI Management
* e The 2005 Election
* CHAPTER 6: THE UNITED STATES: FOREIGN CORRUPT PRACTICES ACT AND
CAMPAIGN FINANCING
* 1 Colonial Heritage
* 2 Constitutional Debates
* 3 Yazoo Controversy
* 4 Passage of 14th Amendment
* 5 Construction of Panama Canal
* 6 Watergate
* 7 Foreign Corrupt Practices Act
* 8 Citizens United Case
* CHAPTER 7: BRIBING FOREIGN OFFICIALS: THE OECD ANTI-CORRUPTION
INSTRUMENTS
* 1 Is bribery a necessary evil?
* 2 The US Foreign Corrupt Practices Act
* 3 The initiative and first steps in the OECD
* 4 The 1994 Recommendation and the Follow-up
* 5 Implementing the Convention
* 6 The crisis
* 7 Overcoming the crisis: the UK Bribery Act 2010
* 8 Uneven application
* 9 Further challenges
* 10 A new step forward: the 2009 Recommendation
* 11 A final positive experience
* 12 Conclusion
* CHAPTER 8: THE UN CONVENTION AGAINST CORRUPTION
* 1 Global Significance
* 2 The Politics of UNCAC
* 3 The United Nations Convention against Corruption: anti-corruption's
expanding frontier
* a Overview of the United Nations Convention Against Corruption
* b Provisions directly affecting international business
* c Strengthening national integrity systems
* d The implementation review mechanism
* Part III: Pervasive Trouble Spots
* CHAPTER 9: BANKING AND FINANCE
* 1 Grand corruption and money flows
* 2 A new topic altogether
* 3 Expansion
* 4 Current status of rules against corruption-money laundering
* 5 Asset Recovery
* 6 Is Asset Recovery working?
* 7 Conclusion
* CHAPTER 10: EXTRACTIVE INDUSTRIES
* 1 The 'resource curse'
* 2 Publish what you pay
* 3 The Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative
* 4 The struggle for regulation
* a United States: Section 1504 of the Dodd-Frank Act
* b EU: revision of its Transparency and Bookkeeping Directives
* 5 Regulating trading?
* 6 Collective action as a way forward?
* CHAPTER 11: INFRASTRUCTURE AND CONSTRUCTION
* 1 The risks
* 2 What needs to be done?
* CHAPTER 12: AERONAUTICS AND DEFENSE
* 1 What are the particular risks in defense procurement?
* 2 The key role of defense offsets
* 3 Specific corruption risk related to offsets
* 4 How to prevent corruption in the defense industries?
* CHAPTER 13: THE ART MARKET
* 1 Challenges
* 2 Self-regulation?
* 3 International law?
* CHAPTER 14: THE PHARMACEUTICAL INDUSTRY
* 1 Challenges
* 2 What needs to be done?
* CHAPTER 15: SPORTS GOVERNING BODIES: THE FIFA EXPERIENCE
* 1 Emotions and big business
* 2 Multinational enterprises and quasi-intergovernmental organizations
* 3 Old Boys suddenly becoming rich
* 4 FIFA a company in trouble or a criminal organization?
* 5 The responsibility of the host country
* 6 What's wrong with self-regulation?
* 7 Example FIFA
* 8 International regulation
* 9 What is on the current reform list?
* CHAPTER 16: DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE
* 1 Its logic
* 2 Is development assistance effective?
* 3 Donor interest
* 4 Tolerating embezzlement?
* 5 Is there a way out of the dilemma?
* 6 Oil-for-Food
* a The official Programme
* b Planned Distribution of Oil Proceeds
* c What went wrong?
* d Oil Surcharges - Flow of Funds
* e Humanitarian Contract Kickbacks - Flow of Funds
* f Illicit Income Received by Iraq under the Programme
* 7 The Contribution of the IFIs
* Part IV: Criminal Law and other Forms of Regulation
* CHAPTER 17: STRENGTHS AND LIMITATIONS OF CRIMINAL LAW
* 1 Is criminal law really that essential to combating bribery?
* 2 Who is a 'foreign public official'?
* 3 What about the eternal 'facilitation payments'?
* 4 Individuals versus corporate liability
* 5 Watch your agents!
* 6 The proof is in the pudding
* 7 Are prosecutors and courts out of their depths?
* 8 Do we need a Supranational Criminal Court for large scale
corruption?
* CHAPTER 18: BEYOND CRIMINAL LAW: ADMINISTRATIVE SANCTIONS AND
PREVENTIVE MEASURES
* 1 Regulatory sanctions
* 2 Debarment by MDBs
* 3 Automatic debarment?
* 4 Is debarment always the best solution?
* 5 Dealing with corruption in arbitration procedures
* 6 Prevention
* Part V: Private Sector Responses
* CHAPTER 19: PRIVATE SECTOR RESPONSE TO CORRUPTION
* 1 Major Trends
* 2 Evolution of Compliance
* a Role of NGOs
* b UN Global Compact
* c Industry Sector Initiatives: Wolfsberg
* d Other Industry Sector Initiatives
* Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI)
* Construction Sector Transparency (CoST)
* Aerospace and Defense (IFBEC)
* 3 Common Problem Areas
* a Gifts, Entertainment and Travel Expenses
* b Lobbyists and Sales Representatives
* c Political Contributions
* d Avoiding Extortion
* e Private-to-Private Bribery
* f Facilitation Payments
* g Foreign Subsidiaries and Joint Ventures
* 4 Psychology of Corrupt Conduct
* a Type A
* b Type B
* c Type C
* 5 Factors Needed to Influence Corporate Culture
* a Tone at the top is important
* b Transparent Rules
* c Leadership selection
* 6 Moving Anti-corruption to the Next Level
* CHAPTER 20: COLLECTIVE ACTION
* 1 Why collective action?
* 2 From an academic think piece to a practical solution
* 3 What is collective action?
* 4 Is collective action really necessary?
* Part VI: Moving Forward
* CHAPTER 21: WHAT HAVE WE ACHIEVED?
* 1 Achievements and challenges
* 2 Accomplishments
* 3 Challenges
* CHAPTER 22: GLOBALIZATION AND DIGITAL REVOLUTION
* 1 Globalization
* a Globalization of Corruption
* b Impact of Globalization on Law Enforcement
* 2 Digital Revolution
* a Cyber Forensics
* b Digital Initiatives
* c The Political Impact
* d Awareness Raising
* CHAPTER 23: DIFFERENT STRATEGIES FOR DIFFERENT COUNTRIES
* 1 Countries with Strong Democratic Institutions
* 2 Countries with Weaker Democratic Institutions
* 3 Countries with Autocratic Governments
* a Working with China
* b Working with Russia
* c The Arab Spring and its Implications for the Middle East and North
Africa
* 4 Failed States
* 5 Long-Term Strategy Perspective
* Bibliography
* Index