Corruption, informality and entrepreneurship in Romania

Author(s)

    • Bratu, Roxana

Bibliographic Information

Corruption, informality and entrepreneurship in Romania

Roxana Bratu

(Political corruption and governance series)

Palgrave Macmillan, c2018

Available at  / 2 libraries

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Note

Bibliography: p. 237-268

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book examines the meaning, structure, practices and symbolism of corruption in relationship to European Union structural funding in Romania. It offers a unique account of the complex transformations faced by post-communist societies. Despite the new legislation that effectively re-branded typical economic practices in Romanian society as 'corruption', entrepreneurs continue to use them in everyday interactions. The entrepreneurial culture described in the chapters is an ordinary trait of the local work routines. Rather than pursuing the singular logic of corruption, the author explores the concept of informality by focusing on the socio-historical context and the meanings embedded in the society that provides solutions to the problems. The book will appeal to students, scholars and practitioners in the areas of corruption, public policy and EU policy and politics.

Table of Contents

1. Corruption European Union Funding: Transnational Policies Versus Local Praxis2. A Dance of the (Il)legal: Transnational Aid Flows, Entrepreneurship and Corruption3. Transnational Constructions of Development and Control4. Bottom-Up European Integration: EU Ideal Types Versus Romanian Innovations5. "I Make the Papers Look Credible": Consultants' Educational Role in Constructing Eligibility6. Flat-Caps and Shackles: New Hierarchies of Bureaucratic Belonging7. Friday Lunch with EU Funding: Profit-Making RoutinesConclusion.

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