Institutional innovation for accountability: The National Anti-Corruption System in Mexic

The adoption of comprehensive institutional reforms that will establish the basis for improving the rule of law and accountability is needed to combat corruption. Nonetheless, this article posits that for these reforms to be effective the rigorous and sustained support of decisive actors is needed....

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Main Author: Alejandro Monsivais-Carrillo
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: Facultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales, Sede Ecuador 2019-09-01
Series:Íconos
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistas.flacsoandes.edu.ec/iconos/article/view/3793
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spelling doaj-eff98f4bd3b54df6bdcfbe02fc092a7d2020-11-24T21:49:10ZspaFacultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales, Sede EcuadorÍconos 1390-12492224-69832019-09-0123655169https://doi.org/10.17141/iconos.65.2019.3793Institutional innovation for accountability: The National Anti-Corruption System in MexicAlejandro Monsivais-CarrilloThe adoption of comprehensive institutional reforms that will establish the basis for improving the rule of law and accountability is needed to combat corruption. Nonetheless, this article posits that for these reforms to be effective the rigorous and sustained support of decisive actors is needed. Otherwise, no matter how progressive or innovative these reforms may seem on paper, institutional innovations could become ineffectual or cancelled de facto. This article advances this argument by providing an analysis of México’s National Anti-Corruption System (SNA). The SNA represents the case of an institutional innovation aimed at rebuilding accountability in a country characterized by persistent and pervasive political corruption. The analysis shows that SNA emerged from a legislative process that included the effective intervention of a network of experts and specialized organizations in this subject during a politically favorable moment due to corruption scandals that affected the incumbent government. As a result, the original initiative proposed by the government was replaced by a much more ambitious and progressive institutional framework. The analysis also shows that the SNA has been confronted with different challenges at a national and local level. Specifically, the ambivalent and weak commitment towards this system, highlighted by key actors in decisive moments, has limited its full implementation.https://revistas.flacsoandes.edu.ec/iconos/article/view/3793Institutional changecorruptiondemocracylegalityMexicoaccountability
collection DOAJ
language Spanish
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alejandro Monsivais-Carrillo
spellingShingle Alejandro Monsivais-Carrillo
Institutional innovation for accountability: The National Anti-Corruption System in Mexic
Íconos
Institutional change
corruption
democracy
legality
Mexico
accountability
author_facet Alejandro Monsivais-Carrillo
author_sort Alejandro Monsivais-Carrillo
title Institutional innovation for accountability: The National Anti-Corruption System in Mexic
title_short Institutional innovation for accountability: The National Anti-Corruption System in Mexic
title_full Institutional innovation for accountability: The National Anti-Corruption System in Mexic
title_fullStr Institutional innovation for accountability: The National Anti-Corruption System in Mexic
title_full_unstemmed Institutional innovation for accountability: The National Anti-Corruption System in Mexic
title_sort institutional innovation for accountability: the national anti-corruption system in mexic
publisher Facultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales, Sede Ecuador
series Íconos
issn 1390-1249
2224-6983
publishDate 2019-09-01
description The adoption of comprehensive institutional reforms that will establish the basis for improving the rule of law and accountability is needed to combat corruption. Nonetheless, this article posits that for these reforms to be effective the rigorous and sustained support of decisive actors is needed. Otherwise, no matter how progressive or innovative these reforms may seem on paper, institutional innovations could become ineffectual or cancelled de facto. This article advances this argument by providing an analysis of México’s National Anti-Corruption System (SNA). The SNA represents the case of an institutional innovation aimed at rebuilding accountability in a country characterized by persistent and pervasive political corruption. The analysis shows that SNA emerged from a legislative process that included the effective intervention of a network of experts and specialized organizations in this subject during a politically favorable moment due to corruption scandals that affected the incumbent government. As a result, the original initiative proposed by the government was replaced by a much more ambitious and progressive institutional framework. The analysis also shows that the SNA has been confronted with different challenges at a national and local level. Specifically, the ambivalent and weak commitment towards this system, highlighted by key actors in decisive moments, has limited its full implementation.
topic Institutional change
corruption
democracy
legality
Mexico
accountability
url https://revistas.flacsoandes.edu.ec/iconos/article/view/3793
work_keys_str_mv AT alejandromonsivaiscarrillo institutionalinnovationforaccountabilitythenationalanticorruptionsysteminmexic
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