The Role of Parliament in Curbing Corruption
In most countries, parliament has the constitutional mandate to both oversee government and to hold government to account; often, audit institutions, ombuds and anti-corruption agencies report to parliament, as a means of ensuring both their independence from government and reinforcing parliament...
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2006
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sg-smu-ink.soss_research-11102010-08-31T09:30:04Z The Role of Parliament in Curbing Corruption Stapenhurst, Rick Pelizzo, Riccardo Johnston, Nyall In most countries, parliament has the constitutional mandate to both oversee government and to hold government to account; often, audit institutions, ombuds and anti-corruption agencies report to parliament, as a means of ensuring both their independence from government and reinforcing parliament's position at the apex of accountability institutions. At the same time, parliaments can also play a key role in promoting accountability, through constituency outreach, public hearings, and parliamentary commissions. This title will be of interest to parliamentarians and parliamentary staff, development practitioners, students of development and those interested in curbing corruption and improving governance in developing and developed countries alike. 2006-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/111 info:doi/10.1596/978-0-8213-6723-0 Research Collection School of Social Sciences eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Political corruption Legislative bodies Developing countries Parliamentarians Political Science |
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Political corruption Legislative bodies Developing countries Parliamentarians Political Science Stapenhurst, Rick Pelizzo, Riccardo Johnston, Nyall The Role of Parliament in Curbing Corruption |
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In most countries, parliament has the constitutional mandate to both oversee government and to hold government to account; often, audit institutions, ombuds and anti-corruption agencies report to parliament, as a means of ensuring both their independence from government and reinforcing parliament's position at the apex of accountability institutions. At the same time, parliaments can also play a key role in promoting accountability, through constituency outreach, public hearings, and parliamentary commissions. This title will be of interest to parliamentarians and parliamentary staff, development practitioners, students of development and those interested in curbing corruption and improving governance in developing and developed countries alike. |
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text |
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Stapenhurst, Rick Pelizzo, Riccardo Johnston, Nyall |
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Stapenhurst, Rick Pelizzo, Riccardo Johnston, Nyall |
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Stapenhurst, Rick |
title |
The Role of Parliament in Curbing Corruption |
title_short |
The Role of Parliament in Curbing Corruption |
title_full |
The Role of Parliament in Curbing Corruption |
title_fullStr |
The Role of Parliament in Curbing Corruption |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Role of Parliament in Curbing Corruption |
title_sort |
role of parliament in curbing corruption |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2006 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/111 |
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