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The Diverse Facets of Corruption in Sierra Leone


The Diverse Facets of Corruption in Sierra Leone



von: Emmanuel Saffa Abdulai, Ina Kubbe

128,39 €

Verlag: Palgrave Macmillan
Format: PDF
Veröffentl.: 15.07.2024
ISBN/EAN: 9783031529580
Sprache: englisch

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Beschreibungen

<p>This edited volume delves into Sierra Leone’s complex post-conflict landscape. It posits that the nation’s path to peace and stability hinges on robust anticorruption measures. The chapters explore Sierra Leoneans’ unique perception of corruption, reflecting its political, economic, legal and socio-cultural dimensions. Moving away from mere theoretical abstraction, the book pulls together fascinating practical discussions on the success and challenges of anti-corruption tools used in Sierra Leone. Approaches used to explain corruption in this postwar fragile democratic country include issues like non-conviction-based asset recovery and how it works; unexplained wealth exposes lifestyle offences, accountability of the judiciary and how judicial institutions can become a predator; the role of the media in the fight against corruption; the part of culture and history in engraining corruption; patrimonialism as an explanation of corruption; ad social norms and sociological exposition to explain corruption.<br></p><p></p>
<p>Part A: Theories of Corruption in Sierra Leone.- Chapter 1: Introduction: Corruption in Sierra Leone.- Chapter 2: Deconstructing the Historically and Culturally-Specific Forms and Patterns of Corruption in Sierra Leone.- Chapter 3: The Patrimonialism of Corruption and the Corruption of Patrimonialism: An Analysis of the Bases of Normative Deviations in Sierra Leone.- Chapter 4: The Challenges of the Post-Conflict State’s Institutionalised Corruption in Sierra Leone: A Sociological-Institutionalist Perspective.- Chapter 5: Social Parameters of Corruption and Status.- Part B: Fighting Corruption in Practice in Sierra Leone.- Chapter 6: Global Theories and Local Reaction: Corruption and Traditional Governance in Sierra Leone.- Chapter 7: Utilising Communication Paradigms in the Fight Against Corruption.- Chapter 8: Unexplained Wealth is But a Slice in the Corruption Triangle.- Chapter 9: When the Protector Becomes the Predator, It is Time for Judicial Accountability.- Chapter 10: Record Management in the Fight Against Corruption and the Promotion of Good Governance in Sierra Leone.- Chapter 11: The Efficacy of Non-Conviction Based Approach to Fighting Corruption in Sierra Leone.- Chapter 12: Examination Types, Stages and Malpractices: A Sociological Investigation of the Normalization, Digitalization and Massification of Examination Deviance in Sierra Leone.- Part C: The War Forward.- Chapter 13: Conclusion – The complex dynamics and solutions of corruption in Sierra Leone.</p>
<p><b>Emmanuel Saffa Abdulai</b>&nbsp;(PhD) is an anti-corruption crusader and legal and governance scholar with several publications on corruption in Africa. He is a lecturer and the head of the Department of Legal Studies, Faculty of Law, University of Sierra Leone. Over the previous two decades, Abdulai led the campaigner to pass and implement freedom of information law in Sierra Leone and some African countries as a civil society practitioner working for the Society for Democratic Initiatives, Sierra Leone.<br></p><p><b>Ina Kubbe&nbsp;</b>works at the University of Tel Aviv, at the School of Political Science, Government and International Relations, where she mainly researches and teaches corruption, migration, gender politics, and conflict resolution. She is also a Professor at Austria’s International Anti-Corruption Academy (IACA). Ina specialises in social science methodology and comparative research on empirical democracy, corruption and governance research. Ina has published several books, special issues, and articles in the field and is a founding member of the Interdisciplinary Corruption Research Network (ICRN) as well as the Chair of the ECPR Standing Group on “(Anti)Corruption and Integrity.”<br></p><div><br></div><p></p><p></p>
<p>This edited volume delves into Sierra Leone’s complex post-conflict landscape. It posits that the nation’s path to peace and stability hinges on robust anticorruption measures. The chapters explore Sierra Leoneans’ unique perception of corruption, reflecting its political, economic, legal and socio-cultural dimensions. Moving away from mere theoretical abstraction, the book pulls together fascinating practical discussions on the success and challenges of anti-corruption tools used in Sierra Leone. Approaches used to explain corruption in this postwar fragile democratic country include issues like non-conviction-based asset recovery and how it works; unexplained wealth exposes lifestyle offences, accountability of the judiciary and how judicial institutions can become a predator; the role of the media in the fight against corruption; the part of culture and history in engraining corruption; patrimonialism as an explanation of corruption; ad social norms and sociological exposition to explain corruption.</p><p></p><p><b>Emmanuel Saffa Abdulai</b> (PhD) is an anti-corruption crusader and legal and governance scholar with several publications on corruption in Africa. He is a lecturer and the head of the Department of Legal Studies, Faculty of Law, University of Sierra Leone. Over the previous two decades, Abdulai led the campaigner to pass and implement freedom of information law in Sierra Leone and some African countries as a civil society practitioner working for the Society for Democratic Initiatives, Sierra Leone.<br></p>

<p><b>Ina Kubbe </b>works at the University of Tel Aviv, at the School of Political Science, Government and International Relations, where she mainly researches and teaches corruption, migration, gender politics, and conflict resolution. She is also a Professor at Austria’s International Anti-Corruption Academy (IACA). Ina specialises in social science methodology and comparative research on empirical democracy, corruption and governance research. Ina has published several books, special issues, and articles in the field and is a founding member of the Interdisciplinary Corruption Research Network (ICRN) as well as the Chair of the ECPR Standing Group on “(Anti)Corruption and Integrity.”<br></p><br><p></p>
Analyses corruption in Sierra Leone in the past, present and future Combines thorough and detailed primary and secondary research Draws on interdisciplinary research to analyse the destabilising role of corruption in Sierra Leone