ISBN |
9780198875642 (hardback) |
|
9780198875666 (epub) |
ISBN/ISSN |
10.1093/oso/9780198875642.001.0001 doi |
Märkused |
Sisaldab bibliograafiat ja registrit |
Sisukord |
1. Corruption, Responsibilities, and Global Justice: An Introduction -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 Forms of Corruption: An Introduction -- 1.3 An Improperly Close Inter-dependence between Business and Government -- 1.4 Corrupting Healthcare and Medical and Health Knowledge -- 1.5 What Drives Corruption? -- 1.6 Book Overview -- 1.7 Why Should Normative Theorists Be Interested in This Project? -- 1.8 The Central Kind of Corruption in View in This Project: A Clarification -- 1.9 Conclusions -- 2. Corruption and Global Injustice -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Corruption and Global Deprivation: The Case of Clean Water -- 2.3 What Should We Want in an Account of Global Justice? Some Key Themes -- 2.4 How Does Corruption Undermine Global Justice Goals? -- 2.5 Combatting Corruption: Important Lessons from Empirical Studies and Practice -- 2.6 Conclusions -- 3. Justice, State Responsibilities, and Human Rights -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Justice for Compatriots and Justice for All -- 3.3 Human Rights Practice: Central Features -- 3.4 Is the Human Rights Practice Really the Best We Can Hope for in Our Current Situation? -- 3.5 Duties to Contribute to Resilient Communities that Are Human Rights Sustaining -- 3.6 Conclusions -- 4. Reducing Corruption: The Many Dimensions -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 Robust Institutions, Effective Bureaucracies, and Good Governance -- 4.3 Robust Mechanisms of Accountability -- 4.4 Transparency and Disclosure Requirements: Opportunities and Limitations -- 4.5 Good Institutional Design -- 4.6 Appropriate Ethical and Professional Standards, Procedures, and Training -- 4.7 Controlling Conflicts of Interest -- 4.8 Independent Monitoring and Oversight -- 4.9 Curbing Corruption as a Collective Action problem -- 4.10 Collaborations and Social Action Coalitions -- 4.11 Conclusions -- 5. Contemporary Corruption-curbing Tools -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 Core Parts of UNCAC: An Overview -- 5.3 UNCAC: Some Examples of Core Obligations for State Parties -- 5.4 How Effective Has UNCAC Been So Far? -- 5.5 Multi-stakeholder Initiatives: The Case of Transparency in Extractive Industries -- 5.6 Transparency and Accountability in Infrastructural Projects -- 5.7 Conclusions -- 6. Abusive Tax Avoidance and Tax Professionals' Responsibilities -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 Abusive Tax Avoidance: Some Preliminaries -- 6.3 Factors Contributing to Abusive Tax Avoidance -- 6.4 Assigning Remedial Responsibilities -- 6.5 Causal Contribution: How Tax Professionals Facilitate Abusive Tax Avoidance -- 6.6 Benefit: What Tax Professionals Gain from Abusive Tax Avoidance -- 6.7 Capacity: What Tax Professionals Could Do about Abusive Tax Avoidance -- 6.8 Professional Integrity, Collective Action, and the Outline of Some Responsibilities -- 6.9 Extending the Analysis to Other Enablers -- 6.10 Conclusion -- 7. Sharing Responsibilities for Action -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 Recapping Some Central Points Important to Sharing Responsibilities -- 7.3 Duties for Primary Agents of Justice -- 7.4 Duty Sharing: Some Relevant Factors -- 7.5 Responsibilities to Create Capacity -- 7.6 Specialized Skills, Roles, Responsibilities, and Capacity -- 7.7 Navigating Responsibility Assignments -- 7.8 Conclusions -- 8. Addressing Common Challenges and Future Directions -- 8.1 Introduction to Two Central Challenges -- 8.2 Are There "Culture-Neutral" Ways of Identifying Corruption? -- 8.3 Are the Corruption-Curbing Tools on Offer Culturally Inappropriate? -- 8.4 Chapter Conclusions -- 8.5 Future Directions -- Appendix: Is a Comprehensive Account of Corruption Available? Some Difficulties -- A.1 Introduction -- A.2 Political Corruption: An Introduction to the Standard Account. A.3 Mapping the Many Kinds of Political Corruption -- A.4 Toward a More Inclusive Account of Political Corruption -- A.5 Neighboring Concepts and Some Challenges -- A.6 Generalizing the Analysis -- Bibliography -- Index. |
Märkused |
Corruption is a pervasive problem for global justice: Gillian Brock presents a much-needed philosophical treatment. She offers a new framework for allocating responsibility for corruption, providing the analytical tools we need to tackle the global injustice that it causes. |
Märksõnad |
korruptsioon
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õiglus
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globaliseerumine
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poliitiline eetika
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filosoofilised aspektid
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UDK |
1
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32
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