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University of California Press

About the Book

Corruption is increasingly recognized as a preeminent problem in the developing world. Bribery, extortion, fraud, kickbacks, and collusion have resulted in retarded economies, predator elites, and political instability. In this lively and absorbing book, Robert Klitgaard provides a framework for designing anti-corruption policies, and describes through five case studies how courageous policymakers were able to control corruption.

About the Author

Robert Klitgaard is Dean and Ford Distinguished Professor of International Development adn Security at the RAND Government School. He has been a professor at Harvard and Karachi Universities and has served as a consultant in twenty-one nations in Asia, Africa, and Latin America.

Table of Contents

Preface to the Paperback Edition

1 . Introduction
2. Objectives
3. Policy Measures
4. Graft Busters: When and How to Set Up an·
Anticorruption Agency
5. Combining Internal and External Policies
6. Corruption When Cultures Clash
7. Implementation Strategies
8. Reviewing and Extending

Index

Reviews

"Controlling Corruption is a brilliant book. It is far and away the best work on the subject that I have read and I think the best there is."—Aaron Wildavsky, University of California, Berkeley