Leadership, Institutions and Enforcement
Slobodan Tomić
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Springer International Publishing
Sozialwissenschaften, Recht, Wirtschaft / Politik und Wirtschaft
Beschreibung
This book presents an analysis of five anticorruption agencies (ACAs) from Serbia, Macedonia and Croatia, exploring the impact of organisational factors and leadership on their enforcement patterns during the first decade of the transitional reforms (2001-2012). Contrary to the conventional theory of agency insulation, the analysis reveals that the ACAs’ de facto autonomy was not crucially shaped by their statutory independence, but rather by the reputational management of their leaders. The book draws on a mixture of qualitative and quantitative analysis to document these reputational strategies and how they shaped the ACAs’ de facto autonomy. The findings also suggest that that the ACAs’ organisational model – defined by the delegated mandate and powers (preventative vs suppressive) – represented a key variable that mediated under which conditions high de facto autonomy can be achieved. The book offers contributions to the study of anticorruption policy and ethics regulation, as well as the wider inquiry into drivers of agency independence, particularly in transitional contexts.
Kundenbewertungen
scandals, Macedonia, factual (de facto) autonomy, reputation, USKOK, new democracies, SCPC, enforcement style, political appointments, institutions, corruption, Anticorruption Agency, Croatia, Leaders' incentives, Serbia, diverse case methods, Republican Committee for Resolution of Conflict of Interest, typical case method, institutional theories, Anti-corruption