Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Harvest of Corruption is a book by Frank Ogodo Ogbeche. [1] The play centers on corrupt government system, witnessing a web of deceit, bribery, and moral decay. [2] Aloho, desperate for employment, falls prey to Ochuole's promises, leading her into a job within the Ministry of External Relations under the notorious Chief Haladu Ade-Amaka. [3]
The research conducted in Papua New Guinea reflects cultural norms as the key reason for corruption. Bribery is a pervasive way of carrying out public services in PNG. [5] Papuans don't consider bribery as an illegal act, they considered bribery as a way of earning "quick money and sustain living". [5]
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.
Corruption in South Africa includes the improper use of public resources for private ends, including bribery and improper favouritism. [1] Corruption was at its highest during the period of state capture under the presidency of Jacob Zuma and has remained widespread, negatively "affecting criminal justice, service provision, economic opportunity, social cohesion and political integrity" in ...
Corruption in the United States is the act of government officials abusing their political powers for private gain, typically through bribery or other methods, in the United States government. Corruption in the United States has been a perennial political issue, peaking in the Jacksonian era and the Gilded Age before declining with the reforms ...
The solicitor in charge of the administering the will, A. K. Dutt-Daster, advises them to sell promptly and return home, but Ghote suspects corruption. As Ghote investigates he uncovers a web of corruption that leads inexorably higher and higher in Calcutta's social and political hierarchy.
It’s for this reason that Klein describes the corruption at the heart of “Bribe, Inc” as the “Jeffrey Epstein story for bribery,” one with “lots of people implicated and lots of people ...
As part of this, he announced the future formation of an Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) and the formation of an elite anti-corruption investigative team, called Task Force Sweep, which took over the functions and capacity of NACA, and allotted significantly greater financial resources. [6]