Money, corruption, and political competition in established and emerging democracies
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書誌事項
Money, corruption, and political competition in established and emerging democracies
Lexington Books, c2012
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注記
Includes bibliographical references and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Money, Corruption, and Competition in Established and Emerging Democracies, edited by Jonathan Mendilow, investigates the effectiveness of public subsidization of political competition as an anti-corruption mechanism. The exponential growth of advertising and polling techniques, the need to reach wider publics, and the inability to raise commensurate funds from ordinary members confront parties with ever-increasing difficulty to budget their apparatus. The use of contribution solicitation from corporations and wealthy individuals, drawing on the unpaid use of public services as sources or the imposition of "contributions" from government employees and contractors, and the "sale" of policies, concessions, or access to policy makers are commonly perceived as solutions corrosive to democratic governance. Such solutions shade into one another. Even where provider-consumer connections are only implied, donations by corporations and rich donors involve the desire to surmount the democratic constraints of "one man one vote" in order to gain disproportionate influence on the policy making process. An alternative resolution of the budgetary conundrum adopted by most democracies is the subsidization of political competition.
This collection clarifies outcomes that are critical to an assessment of the ramifications for modern democracy. What do Western countries' experiences with public funding tell us about unforeseen changes in the role of parties and their behavior that are seen as additional costs of the public subsidization of political competition? What can we learn from experiments with subsidization in different contexts about possible pitfalls that should be taken into account, especially when public subsidies are adopted by new and emerging democracies? Answers to such questions are critical if democratic principles and institutions that were formed in an earlier age are to be adjusted to modern needs. In a politically divisive climate, the contributors to this essential collection provide thoughtful insight to some of the most important public and economic policy questions facing our world today.
目次
Preface
by Michael Pinto-Duchinsky
Chapter 1. Introduction: Political Finance, Corruption, and the Future of Democracy
by Jonathan Mendilow
Chapter 2. Do Parties Spend Too Much?
by Manuela S. Kulick and Karl-Heinz Nassmacher
Chapter 3. Parties as Competitive Public Utilities?: The Impact of the Regulatory System of Political Financing on the Party System in France
by Lou Brenez
Chapter 4. Campaign Financing and Politicians' Careers: A Dynamic Perspective
by Abel Francois, Eric Phelippeau, and Pascal Ragouet
Chapter 5. The MSG Effects of Public Campaign Funding
by Jonathan Mendilow and Michael Brogan
Chapter 6. Political Finance, Urban Development, and Political Corruption in Spain
Fernando Jimenez and Manuel Villoria
Chapter 7. Can Public Funding Overcome Corruption?: A View from the Phillipines
by Vicente Reyes
Chapter 8. Politics of Exclusion: Public Party Funding and Electoral Corruption in Zimbabwe
by Dombo Sylvester
Chapter 9. Overcoming Electoral Corruption: The Case of Bangladesh
by Golam Mostafa and Shahjahan Bhuiyan
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