enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Corruption - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corruption

    Corruption includes industrial corruption, consisting of large bribes, as well as petty corruption such as a poacher paying off a park ranger to ignore poaching. The presence of fuel extraction and export is unambiguously associated with corruption, whereas mineral exports only increased corruption in poorer countries.

  3. Political corruption - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Political_corruption

    Corruption hinders the international standards of an education system. Additionally, Plagiarism is a form of corruption in academic research, where it affects originality and disables learning. Individual violations are in close relation to the operation ways of a system.

  4. Kleptocracy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kleptocracy

    The effects of a kleptocratic regime or government on a nation are typically adverse in regards to the welfare of the state's economy, political affairs, and civil rights. Kleptocratic governance typically ruins prospects of foreign investment and drastically weakens the domestic market and cross-border trade.

  5. US sanctions Uganda's parliament speaker, her husband and ...

    www.aol.com/news/us-sanctions-ugandas-parliament...

    The United States on Thursday imposed sanctions on Uganda's parliamentary speaker, her husband and several other officials over corruption and serious abuses of human rights. Parliament Speaker ...

  6. Economics of corruption - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economics_of_Corruption

    1. Corruption as an economic, social and political problem. Corruption's specific features in economies in transition. 2. Corruption and rent-seeking behavior. Basic model of rent-seeking and its research. Problem of rent's dissipation. 3. Static and dynamic models of Rent-seeking. Cases of pure and mixed public goods. 4.

  7. Politics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Politics

    Negative liberty has been described as freedom from oppression or coercion and unreasonable external constraints on action, often enacted through civil and political rights, while positive liberty is the absence of disabling conditions for an individual and the fulfillment of enabling conditions, e.g. economic compulsion, in a society.

  8. Anti-corruption - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-corruption

    The B20 policy interventions are another form of engaging in the anti-corruption discourse, as B20 members are attempting to support the G20 by offering their insights as business leaders, including in regard to strengthening anti-corruption policies, e.g. transparency in government procurement or more comprehensive anti-corruption laws. [97]

  9. Appearance of corruption - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Appearance_of_corruption

    A cartoon depicts the behavior of taking bribes. The appearance of corruption is a principle of law [1] [2] mentioned in, or relevant to, several U.S. Supreme Court decisions related to campaign finance in the United States, while the basis of the principle "corruption" refers to dishonest or illegal behavior for personal gain. [3]