Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
The Structure of Corruption: A Systemic Analysis
-
Sarah Chayes
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Table of Contents v
- List of Figures vii
- List of Tables xi
- Editor’s Preface 1
-
I. CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORKS
- Introduction: Freeing Post-Soviet Regimes from the Procrustean Bed of Democracy Theory 3
- The System Paradigm Revisited: Clarification and Additions in the Light of Experiences in the Post-Socialist Region 21
- Neopatrimonialism in post-Soviet Eurasia 75
- Towards a terminology for postcommunist regimes 97
-
II. ACTORS OF POWER
- Putin’s neo-nomenklatura system and its evolution 177
- Republic of Clans: The evolution of the Ukrainian political system 217
- Is Belarus a Classic Post-Communist Mafia State? 247
- The Romanian Patronal System of Public Corruption 275
-
III. TECHNIQUES AND TOOLS
- The Russian Party System 317
- The Belarusian non-party political system: Government, trust and institutions, 1990–2015 353
- Illiberal State Censorship: A Must-have Accessory for Any Mafia State 371
- Disarming Public Protests in Russia: Transforming Public Goods into Private Goods 385
-
IV. WEALTH AND OWNERSHIP
- The Institution of Power&Ownership in the Former USSR: Origin, Diversity of Forms, and Influence on Transformation Processes 413
- Russia’s Network State and Reiderstvo Practices: The Roots to Weak Property Rights Protection after the post-Communist Transition 437
- From Free Market Corruption Risk to the Certainty of a State-Run Criminal Organization (using Hungary as an example) 461
-
V. CONTRASTS AND CONNECTIONS
- Belarus, Russia, and Ukraine as Post- Soviet Rent-Seeking Regimes 487
- The Structure of Corruption: A Systemic Analysis 507
- The new East European patronal states and the rule-of-law 531
- Parallel System Narratives—Polish and Hungarian regime formations compared A structuralist essay 611
- List of Contributors 657
- Index 659
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Table of Contents v
- List of Figures vii
- List of Tables xi
- Editor’s Preface 1
-
I. CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORKS
- Introduction: Freeing Post-Soviet Regimes from the Procrustean Bed of Democracy Theory 3
- The System Paradigm Revisited: Clarification and Additions in the Light of Experiences in the Post-Socialist Region 21
- Neopatrimonialism in post-Soviet Eurasia 75
- Towards a terminology for postcommunist regimes 97
-
II. ACTORS OF POWER
- Putin’s neo-nomenklatura system and its evolution 177
- Republic of Clans: The evolution of the Ukrainian political system 217
- Is Belarus a Classic Post-Communist Mafia State? 247
- The Romanian Patronal System of Public Corruption 275
-
III. TECHNIQUES AND TOOLS
- The Russian Party System 317
- The Belarusian non-party political system: Government, trust and institutions, 1990–2015 353
- Illiberal State Censorship: A Must-have Accessory for Any Mafia State 371
- Disarming Public Protests in Russia: Transforming Public Goods into Private Goods 385
-
IV. WEALTH AND OWNERSHIP
- The Institution of Power&Ownership in the Former USSR: Origin, Diversity of Forms, and Influence on Transformation Processes 413
- Russia’s Network State and Reiderstvo Practices: The Roots to Weak Property Rights Protection after the post-Communist Transition 437
- From Free Market Corruption Risk to the Certainty of a State-Run Criminal Organization (using Hungary as an example) 461
-
V. CONTRASTS AND CONNECTIONS
- Belarus, Russia, and Ukraine as Post- Soviet Rent-Seeking Regimes 487
- The Structure of Corruption: A Systemic Analysis 507
- The new East European patronal states and the rule-of-law 531
- Parallel System Narratives—Polish and Hungarian regime formations compared A structuralist essay 611
- List of Contributors 657
- Index 659