Taking the Blinders Off: Questioning How Development Assistance is Used to combat Corruption

Jan 1, 2016
By: Chigas D; Scharbatke-Church C Henry J. Leir Institute
Abstract
This paper suggests that the limited effectiveness of anti-corruption programming, particularly in fragile and conflict-affected states, stems from a problem-strategy mismatch, wherein a simple response is being applied to a complex, systemic problem that is inseparable from the socio-political context in which it takes place. It proposes changes in the way corruption is analyzed and anti-corruption strategies developed in order to account for the complexity of corruption dynamics.
Copy Citation Chigas, D., & Scharbatke-Church, C. (2016). Taking the Blinders Off: Questioning How Development Assistance is Used to combat Corruption. Medford, MA: Henry J. Leir Institute. Retrieved from https://sites.tufts.edu/ Copied to clipboard.