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The Anti-Corruption Industry: From Movement to Institution

Author

Summary, in English

This paper describes takes the concept of ‘industry’, often used pejoratively in critiques of international development, and applies it to the field of anti-corruption. The characteristics of the anti-corruption industry, including anti-corruptionist discourse, resemble that which has taken place in development aid, human rights, civil society and gender equality. The anti-corruption industry thus includes key global actors, secondary actors who look for ‘signals’, and an apparatus of understandings, knowledge, statistics and measures, all of which tend to prioritize anti-corruption institutions over anti-corruption activism. It is argued that the questionable impact of anti-corruption programs enables the anti-corruption industry to coexist along with the corruption it ostensibly is combating. Instead of viewing anti-corruption as hegemonic, we need to critically examine the consequences of the global institutionalization of anti-corruptionist discourse and anti-corruption practice.

Publishing year

2010

Language

English

Document type

Working paper

Topic

  • Social Anthropology

Keywords

  • anti-corruption
  • anti-coruption industry
  • Social anthropology
  • development industry
  • socialantropologi
  • anti-corruptionism
  • corruption

Status

Published