Policy Brief 8: It takes a network to defeat a network – What Collective Action practitioners can learn from research into corrupt networks

Authors

  • Claudia Baez Camargo Basel Institute on Governance; University of Basel
  • Jacopo Costa Basel Institute on Governance; University of Basel
  • Vanessa Hans Basel Institute on Governance; University of Basel
  • Lucy Koechlin University of Basel
  • Scarlet Wannenwetsch Basel Institute on Governance; University of Basel
https://doi.org/10.12685/bigpb.8.1-10

Keywords:

informal networks, private-sector corruption, anti-corruption evidence, multi-stakeholder partnerships, Collective Action, corruption research, social norms

Abstract

This Policy Brief distils recommendations for Collective Action practitioners based on empirical insights on certain forms of corruption involving private-sector actors.

Field research carried out in Tanzania and Uganda produced detailed case studies that show how informal networks link private and public sector actors to pursue common illicit goals, such as gaining an unfair business advantage, avoiding a sanction, decreasing taxes owed or jumping the queue at the point of delivery of public services. Corruption, most often bribery, is the currency that works to cement and nurture those networks.

This Policy Brief is based on that research and a series of in-depth interviews with Collective Action practitioners working in Africa, Eastern Europe and Latin America. The goal is to extract insights from what we have learned about the networks that fuel corruption and discuss implications for anti-corruption Collective Action initiatives. 

Cover page of Policy Brief 8

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Published

2021-12-01

How to Cite

Baez Camargo, C., Costa, J., Hans, V., Koechlin, L. and Wannenwetsch, S. (2021) “Policy Brief 8: It takes a network to defeat a network – What Collective Action practitioners can learn from research into corrupt networks”, Basel Institute on Governance Policy Briefs, (8), pp. 1–10. doi: 10.12685/bigpb.8.1-10.