Global Corruption Report 2007

Global Corruption Report 2007

Corruption in Judicial Systems
Buch | Softcover
328 Seiten
2007
Cambridge University Press (Verlag)
978-0-521-70070-2 (ISBN)
37,40 inkl. MwSt
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Judicial corruption blocks access to justice, hampers economic development, erodes human rights and undermines trust in the institutions of justice. This important book brings together scholars, judges and civil society activists from around the world to examine how, why and where corruption mars judicial processes.
The Global Corruption Report 2007 looks at how, why and where corruption mars judicial processes, and to reflect on remedies for corruption-tainted systems. The book focuses on judges and courts but situates them within the broader justice system - police, prosecutors, lawyers and agencies responsible for enforcing judicial decisions. It also looks at the social context of the judiciary and shows how societal expectations, the existence of non-state justice mechanisms and the strength of informal networks that circumvent the justice system, all have a bearing on judicial corruption. The book takes a close look at the two main judicial corruption problems: political interference and petty bribery by court personnel. The 37 country case studies and a series of concrete recommendations for judges, political powers, businesses, lawyers, prosecutors, academics, NGOs and donors are supplemented by 15 empirical studies of corruption in various sectors, including the justice sector.

Transparency International is the global civil society organisation leading the fight against corruption.

Part I. Comparative Analysis of Judicial Corruption: 1. Introducing the problem Mary Noel Pepys, Transparency International; 2. Independence, political interference and corruption Susan Rose-Ackerman, Stefan Voigt, Roy A. Schotland, Tom Blass and Gugulethu Moyo; 3. Accountability and competence of judges Greg Mayne, Emilio Cárdenas, Héctor Chayer, Vincent Yang, Linda Ehrichs, Carlo Guarnieri, Zora Ledergerber, Gretta Fenner and Mark Pieth, 4. The broader justice system Edgardo Buscaglia, Nicholas Cowdery, Eva Joly, Jorge Fernández Menéndez, Fiona Darroch, Don Deya and Arnold Tsunga; 5. Courts, culture and corruption Marina Kurkchiyan Gherardo Colombo, Geoffrey Robertson, Katya Salazar, Jacqueline de Gramont, Celestine Nyamu-Musembi and Stephen Golub; 6. Lessons learned about fighting judicial corruption Linn Hammergren, Oluyemi Osinbajo, Keith Henderson, Fabrizio Sarrica and Oliver Stolpe; Part II. Country Reports on Judicial Corruption: 7. Country reports on judicial corruption Transparency International, Fayçal Métaoui, Rena Safaralieva, S. I. Laskar, Samantha Ford, Theary C. Seng, Davor Harasic, Roxana Salazar, José Pablo Ramos, TI Croatia, Michal ≤tika, Hossam Baghat, Tamuna Karosanidze, Camrin Christensen, Dominic Ayine, Mechthild Ruenger, Daniel Batidam, Carlos Melgar Peña, Transparency International India, Doron Navot, Transparency International Kenya, Miguel Carbonell, Transparency International Mongolia, Transparency Maroc, Krishna Prasad Bhandari, Djibo Abdoulaye, Jawaid A. Siddiqi, Palestine Coalition for Accountability and Integrity, Angélica Maytín Justiniani, Transparency Paraguay, Dolores Español, Transparency International Papua New Guinea, Victor Alistar, Judith February, Kishali Pinto Jayawardana, J.C. Weliamuna, Transparency International Turkey, Kyela Leakey, Davies Chikalanga, Goodwell Lungu and Ngoza Yezi; Part III. Corruption Research: 8. Introduction Robin Hodess; 9. When are judges likely to be corrupt? Stefan Voigt; 10. Bribes, punishment and judicial immunity Ernesto Dal Bó, Pedro Dal Bó and Rafael Di Tella; 11. Informality, legal institutions and social norms Åse Berit Grødeland; 12. Enforcement of anti-corruption laws: the need for performance monitoring Tiernan Mennen, Eric Fry and, Richard E. Messick; 13. The global corruption barometer 2006 Tom Lavers; 14. Measuring corruption - myths and realities Daniel Kaufmann, Aart Kraay and Massimo Mastruzzi; 15. Corruption perceptions index 2006 Johann Graf Lambsdorff; 16. Bribe payers index (BPI) 2006 Diane Mak; 17. International business attitudes to corruption John Bray; 18. Business corruption - speak out or take part? Tina Søreide; 19. Specific manifestations of corruption: comparing Brazil and Russia Leon Zurawicki; 20. Explaining patterns of corruption in the Russian regions Phyllis Dininio and Robert Orttung; 21. Quantifying public procurement losses in the Czech Republic David Ondrácka; 22. Identifying reticent respondents in Romanian corruption surveys Omar Azfar and Peter Murrell; 23. ANCORAGE-NET - sharing knowledge-based solutions to corruption control Luís de Sousa and João Triães; 24. Auditing, accountability and anticorruption - how relevant are autonomous audit agencies? Carlos Santiso.

Erscheint lt. Verlag 24.5.2007
Reihe/Serie Transparency International Global Corruption Reports
Mitarbeit Zusammenstellung: Transparency International
Zusatzinfo 16 Tables, unspecified
Verlagsort Cambridge
Sprache englisch
Maße 188 x 247 mm
Gewicht 858 g
Themenwelt Recht / Steuern EU / Internationales Recht
Recht / Steuern Privatrecht / Bürgerliches Recht Berufs-/Gebührenrecht
Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie
ISBN-10 0-521-70070-1 / 0521700701
ISBN-13 978-0-521-70070-2 / 9780521700702
Zustand Neuware
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