TY - JOUR
T1 - Preventing malfeasance in low corruption environments
T2 - Twenty public administration responses
AU - Graycar, Adam
AU - Masters, Adam
PY - 2018
Y1 - 2018
N2 - Purpose-Corruption undermines good governance. Strategies for preventing malfeasance in lowcorruption environments require a different approach to that applied in high-corruption environments. This paper aims to ask if criminological theories and practice contribute to the study and prevention of corruption in public organizations? Do crime prevention techniques help us in preventing corruption? Design/methodology/approach-Empirical data demonstrate that the overwhelming majority of public officials in rich countries demonstrate high levels of integrity; yet, significant sums are invested in anticorruption agencies and prevention strategies. This paper reports on recent work with an anti-corruption agency, which forced us to re-think how to deliver an anti-corruption agenda in a low-corruption environment. The authors build on their research of public sector corruption in rich countries to develop a set of 20 situational corruption prevention measures for public administrators. Findings-The result, with lessons from crime prevention, is a prevention tool to support continued good governance in low-corruption environments. Figure 1 is a template that readers can apply in their own environments. Figure 2 is the authors' attempt to populate this template based on the research reported here. Originality/value-The matrix of situational corruption prevention techniques provides two original approaches. First, it recasts the language of crime prevention into a non-confrontational approach to avoid alienating honest public officials. Second, the matrix incorporates common public sector functions to guide the development of context specific corruption prevention techniques.
AB - Purpose-Corruption undermines good governance. Strategies for preventing malfeasance in lowcorruption environments require a different approach to that applied in high-corruption environments. This paper aims to ask if criminological theories and practice contribute to the study and prevention of corruption in public organizations? Do crime prevention techniques help us in preventing corruption? Design/methodology/approach-Empirical data demonstrate that the overwhelming majority of public officials in rich countries demonstrate high levels of integrity; yet, significant sums are invested in anticorruption agencies and prevention strategies. This paper reports on recent work with an anti-corruption agency, which forced us to re-think how to deliver an anti-corruption agenda in a low-corruption environment. The authors build on their research of public sector corruption in rich countries to develop a set of 20 situational corruption prevention measures for public administrators. Findings-The result, with lessons from crime prevention, is a prevention tool to support continued good governance in low-corruption environments. Figure 1 is a template that readers can apply in their own environments. Figure 2 is the authors' attempt to populate this template based on the research reported here. Originality/value-The matrix of situational corruption prevention techniques provides two original approaches. First, it recasts the language of crime prevention into a non-confrontational approach to avoid alienating honest public officials. Second, the matrix incorporates common public sector functions to guide the development of context specific corruption prevention techniques.
KW - Anti-Corruption
KW - Australia
KW - Corruption
KW - Situational Crime Prevention
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85040985088&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1108/JFC-04-2017-0026
DO - 10.1108/JFC-04-2017-0026
M3 - Article
VL - 25
SP - 170
EP - 186
JO - Journal of Financial Crime
JF - Journal of Financial Crime
SN - 1359-0790
IS - 1
ER -