Skip to main content
Please allow one business day for order processing.
Close this alert
Judicial Corruption in Developing Countries: Its Causes and Economic Consequences (Essays in Public Policy #95)

Judicial Corruption in Developing Countries: Its Causes and Economic Consequences (Essays in Public Policy #95)

Current price: $5.00
Publication Date: July 14th, 1999
Publisher:
Hoover Institution Press
ISBN:
9780817943028
Pages:
16

Description

Many scholars have provided path-breaking contributions to the institutional analysis of systemic and systematic corruption. Descriptive studies focusing on corrupt practices and on the impact of corruption on economic development are abundant. Yet the literature has not yet isolated the main legal, organizational, and market-related causes of systemic corruption within the public sector in general and within the judiciary in particular.

This essay proposes a framework within which the institutional analysis of corrupt activities within the judiciary can be further understood in developing countries. First, an approach to the study of public sector corruption based on science, not on guesswork or intuition, must be verifiable if we are to develop reliable anticorruption policy prescriptions. Therefore, legal, economic, and organizational factors are proposed here to explain corruption within the judicial sectors of developing countries. Second, the economic theory of corruption should recognize that official corruption is a significant source of institutional inertia in public sector reforms. An account of the private costs and benefits of judicial reforms as perceived by public officials is also considered in this study.