A chronic political illness, an analysis of corruption and anti-corruption in contemporary China

This study highlights structural and cultural approaches. It argues that corruption in modern times is partially derived from the long history of imperial China characterized by absolute bureaucratic powers and widespread power abuses. Traditional norms and value system, which may exert stable and l...

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Main Author: Sun, Yunbo
Language:en_US
Published: 2007
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/769
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-MWU.1993-7692014-03-29T03:40:57Z A chronic political illness, an analysis of corruption and anti-corruption in contemporary China Sun, Yunbo This study highlights structural and cultural approaches. It argues that corruption in modern times is partially derived from the long history of imperial China characterized by absolute bureaucratic powers and widespread power abuses. Traditional norms and value system, which may exert stable and lasting influence on human behaviour, are able to induce official corruption even in the socialist conditions, without regard to frequent replacements of different regimes or any institutional changes. It is also shown that official corruption in communist China is rooted in the defects inherent in its political and economic structures. The potential incidence and the persistence of certain patterns of official corruption might have been predetermined by these institutional or systemic factors. While the public ownership of means of production and the central planning system have predestined the bureaucracy's overmanagement of the economy and society and vested Party officials with too much discretionary power, economic reform as well as a series of other unsophisticated reform policies, on the other hand, have further intensified this power overconcentration and stimulated the geneses and spread of certain malpractices. Moreover, the lack of a powerful and independent supervisory mechanism, both internal and external, is also conducive to corruption. There is no political opposition, nor is there independent legislation and media in a real sense in today's China. The judiciary and the internal supervisory systems are also problematic and short of the necessary authority and independence. Given these systems' vulnerability to power intervention and the institutional defects inherent in the political structure, it appears inevitable that public power without necessary systemic restraint and supervision would increase the incidence of corruption. (Abstract shortened by UMI.) 2007-05-15T15:16:20Z 2007-05-15T15:16:20Z 1997-03-01T00:00:00Z http://hdl.handle.net/1993/769 en_US
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language en_US
sources NDLTD
description This study highlights structural and cultural approaches. It argues that corruption in modern times is partially derived from the long history of imperial China characterized by absolute bureaucratic powers and widespread power abuses. Traditional norms and value system, which may exert stable and lasting influence on human behaviour, are able to induce official corruption even in the socialist conditions, without regard to frequent replacements of different regimes or any institutional changes. It is also shown that official corruption in communist China is rooted in the defects inherent in its political and economic structures. The potential incidence and the persistence of certain patterns of official corruption might have been predetermined by these institutional or systemic factors. While the public ownership of means of production and the central planning system have predestined the bureaucracy's overmanagement of the economy and society and vested Party officials with too much discretionary power, economic reform as well as a series of other unsophisticated reform policies, on the other hand, have further intensified this power overconcentration and stimulated the geneses and spread of certain malpractices. Moreover, the lack of a powerful and independent supervisory mechanism, both internal and external, is also conducive to corruption. There is no political opposition, nor is there independent legislation and media in a real sense in today's China. The judiciary and the internal supervisory systems are also problematic and short of the necessary authority and independence. Given these systems' vulnerability to power intervention and the institutional defects inherent in the political structure, it appears inevitable that public power without necessary systemic restraint and supervision would increase the incidence of corruption. (Abstract shortened by UMI.)
author Sun, Yunbo
spellingShingle Sun, Yunbo
A chronic political illness, an analysis of corruption and anti-corruption in contemporary China
author_facet Sun, Yunbo
author_sort Sun, Yunbo
title A chronic political illness, an analysis of corruption and anti-corruption in contemporary China
title_short A chronic political illness, an analysis of corruption and anti-corruption in contemporary China
title_full A chronic political illness, an analysis of corruption and anti-corruption in contemporary China
title_fullStr A chronic political illness, an analysis of corruption and anti-corruption in contemporary China
title_full_unstemmed A chronic political illness, an analysis of corruption and anti-corruption in contemporary China
title_sort chronic political illness, an analysis of corruption and anti-corruption in contemporary china
publishDate 2007
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/769
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