Combatting corruption with public deliberation

Research articles

Combatting corruption with public deliberation

Published in: South African Journal of Philosophy
Volume 34 , issue 1 , 2015 , pages: 13–28
DOI: 10.1080/02580136.2015.1010131
Author(s): Emmanuel Ifeanyi Ani Department of Philosophy and Classics, Ghana

Abstract

Building on Seumas Miller's concept of corruption leads me to conclude that the question of disposition is central to the concept of corruption, which prompts me to consider punishment theories with regard to deterring dispositions to corruption. However, problems with punishment as a stand-alone approach lead me to consider institutional reform recommendations. Although institutional reforms have the weakness of merely engaging corrupt disposition in a hide-and-seek game, I seek to reconcile institutional approaches and moral individualism by suggesting that the former is intended to aid the latter, in the sense that resisting corruption is a question of cost, and the onus is to determine how to reduce this cost. In this regard, prevailing proposals are inept without an enabling environment: public deliberation (comprising publicity and deliberation) is a necessary (though not sufficient) condition for combating corruption, because it (1) compels reason to function at its best, (2) demands rational accountability, and therefore account-giving, (3) increases ‘common-good’ thinking, (4) facilitates the recruitment of responsible institutional role-occupants, and (5) is a self-correcting instrument.

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