Books on the topic 'Organisational corruption'

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1

Civil Society Organisations and Corruption Workshop (2001 Mandel Training Centre). Civil society organisations and corruption. Harare]: Transparency International Zimbabwe, 2001.

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2

Blaug, Ricardo. How power corrupts: Cognition and democracy in organisations. Basingstoke [England]: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010.

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3

vander, Beken T., Ruyver B. de, and Siron Nathalie, eds. The organisation of the fight against corruption in the member states and candidate countries of the European Union. Antwerpen: Maklu, 2001.

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4

Korruptionsbekämpfung als globale Herausforderung: Beiträge aus Praxis und Wissenschaft. Wiesbaden: VS, Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften, 2011.

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5

Suriano, Alba Rosa. al-Farāfīr. Venice: Edizioni Ca' Foscari, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.30687/978-88-6969-240-6.

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Based on the Hegelian dialectic of the servant-master, this comedy represents, with the sarcasm and irony typical of its author, a profound reflection on the relationships between human beings. Starting from the local, with a pungent criticism on the social and political condition of Egypt in the Sixties, the two protagonists Farfūr and the Master guide and involve the spectator in a consideration on humanity and on the meaning of life that reaches universality. Divided into two acts, the comedy has no precise indications about time and space, which is confused with the time of representation, also thanks to the involvement of actors who are among the spectators. Discussing each other on names, trades and interpersonal relationships, the two protagonists criticise corruption, poor management of public health, social inequalities, but also the intellectual class that fails to give answers to people’s practical needs. The division in two of human society is even more evident with the second act, when the author’s reflection moves towards the existing organisational and economic systems, dismantling the complexity and reducing them again to a mere servant-master relationship. The other characters of the play are functional to the discourse of Idrīs: wives and children, spectators-actors and especially the figure of the author, who gradually disappears and abandons his own creatures to their fate.
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6

Harmonising anti-corruption compliance: The OECD good practice guidance 2010. Zürich: Dike, 2011.

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7

"Politikbewertung" als Handlungsform internationaler Institutionen: Das Beispiel der Korruptionsbekämpfung der OECD. Berlin: Duncker & Humblot, 2012.

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8

Los demonios del sindicalismo Mexicano. México, D.F: Aguilar, 2015.

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9

Donateurs, si vous saviez: Du Téléthon aux Restos du coeur, enquête dans les coulisses des associations. Rennes: B. Gobin, 2009.

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10

de Cooker, Chris, ed. Governance: International Organisations adapting to changing environments. The International Institute of Administrative Sciences, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.46996/pgs.v4e1.

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The contributions in this book illustrate how international organisations have adapted their governance to changing environments. The book starts with setting a theoretical framework followed by an analysis of the dynamics of change and often the resistance to change. The international community has, moreover, over the last decades created new types of international organisations, which requires reflection on the concept of international organisations itself. But in general existing organisations over time adjusted to new circumstances. Many organisations were in fact created to bring about change in the world, such as eradicating diseases, eliminating hunger, alleviate poverty, etc. But purposes and structures must move with the times. Many new member States joined world-wide organisations following the decolonisation process. Integration processes, such as in the European Union attracted more member States. Particularly European organisations had to review their membership or cooperation schemes with Central and Eastern European countries following the collapse of communism there. The requirement of more accountability and transparency entailed, especially in the financial institutions, the creation of reporting mechanisms for fraud or corruption, but also for submitting claims or grievances by private citizens or companies. It also led to the transformation of one non-governmental organisation into a public international organisation, etc. The case studies written by experts in their respective fields provide detailed analysis and inside information.
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11

Duncan, Smith. Promoting Integrity in the Work of International Organisations: Minimising Fraud and Corruption in Projects. Springer International Publishing AG, 2022.

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12

(Nigeria), Civil Liberties Organisation, ed. Executive lawlessness in the Babangida regime: A report of the Civil Liberties Organisation. Lagos, Nigeria: Civil Liberties Organisation, 1991.

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13

Chong, Wu-Ling. Chinese Indonesians in Post-Suharto Indonesia. Hong Kong University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5790/hongkong/9789888455997.001.0001.

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This book examines the complex situation of ethnic Chinese Indonesians in post-Suharto Indonesia, focusing on Chinese in two of the largest Indonesian cities, Medan and Surabaya. The fall of Suharto in May 1998 led to the opening up of a democratic and liberal space to include a diversity of political actors and ideals in the political process. However, due to the absence of an effective, genuinely reformist party or political coalition, predatory politico-business interests nurtured under the New Order managed to capture the new political and economic regimes. As a result, corruption and internal mismanagement continue to plague the bureaucracy in the country. The indigenous Indonesian population generally still perceives the Chinese minority as an alien minority who are wealthy, selfish, insular and opportunistic; this is partially due to the role some Chinese have played in perpetuating corrupt business practices. As targets of extortion and corruption by bureaucratic officials and youth/crime organisations, the Chinese are neither merely passive bystanders of the democratisation process in Indonesia nor powerless victims of corrupt practices. By focusing on the important interconnected aspects of the role Chinese play in post-Suharto Indonesia, via business, politics and civil society, this book argues, through a combination of Anthony Giddens’s structure-agency theory as well as Pierre Bourdieu’s notion of habitus and field, that although the Chinese are constrained by various conditions, they also have played an active role in shaping these conditions.
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14

Gray, Allison, and Ronald Hinch, eds. A Handbook of Food Crime. Policy Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781447336013.001.0001.

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This book contextualises, evaluates, and problematises the (lack of) legal and regulatory organisation involved in the many processes of food production, distribution, and consumption. Turning a criminological gaze on the conditions under which food is (un)regulated, this book encompasses a range of discussions on the problematic conditions under which food (dis)connects with humanity and its consequences on public health and well-being, nonhuman animals, and the environment, often simultaneously. Influenced by critical criminology, social harm approach, green criminology, corporate criminology, and victimology, while engaging with legal, rural, geographic, and political sciences, the concept of food crime fuses diverse research by questioning issues of legality, criminality, deviance, harm, social justice, ethics, and morality within food systems. Evident problems range from food safety and food fraud, to illegal agricultural labour and state-corporate food crimes, to obesity and food deserts, to livestock welfare and genetically modified foods, to the role of agriculture in climate change and food waste, to food democracy and corporate co-optation of food movements. Theorising and researching these problems involves questioning the processes of lacking or insufficient regulation, absent or ineffective enforcement, resulting harms, and broader issues of governance, corruption, and justice. Due to the contemporary corporatisation of food and the subsequent distancing of humans from foodstuffs and food systems, not only is it important to think criminologically about food, but the criminological study of food may help make criminology relevant today.
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15

William, Blair, Brent Richard, and Grant Tom, eds. Banks and Financial Crime. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/law/9780198716587.001.0001.

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Financial crime is an important and topical area. Concerns over money laundering have grown considerably since links with terrorist organisations have become more apparent in recent years. This revised and updated new edition provides a guide for banks to their regulatory responsibilities, their private law duties, their liabilities to third parties and their obligations to assist persons seeking the recovery of assets (including regulatory bodies within and without the jurisdiction). It also sets the relevant law in its national and international policy context and assesses the current state of this body of law in that context. In the years following the publication of the first edition of Banks and Financial Crime the legal regime against money laundering, terrorist financing, and financial sanctions has not diminished in importance for financial institutions. Indeed, the reverse is the case. In 2012, HSBC paid US authorities a record fine of £1.2 billion for laundering billions of dollars; powers under existing legislation have been exercised for the first time; and there have been significant new developments at the international level. This second edition addresses recent practice under the main international conventions, including the Sixth Session of the Conference of the Parties to the UN Convention against Transnational Organized Crime (October 2012) and the forthcoming Fifth Session of the Conference of States Parties to the UN Convention against Corruption (November 2013). Throughout, the book has been updated to incorporate new developments at the international level; in statute and case law; and in the regulation of financial institutions. It also provides a further assessment of the extent to which there has emerged an international law of tainted money to complement the emergence of an international financial system.
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16

Hodges, Tony. Angola: Anatomy of an Oil State (African Issues). Indiana University Press, 2003.

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17

Hodges, Tony, and International African Institute Staff. Angola: From Afro-Stalinism to Petro-Diamond Capitalism. Boydell & Brewer, Limited, 2001.

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18

Angola: The Anatomy of an Oil State (African Issues). Indiana University Press, 2003.

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19

Sept Ans De Solitude. Gallimard-Jeunesse, 2002.

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20

Normal Organizational Wrongdoing A Critical Analysis Of Theories Of Misconduct In And By Organizations. Oxford University Press, 2013.

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