Bribery in preindustrial societies: understanding the universalism-particularism puzzle

Journal of Anthropological Research Vol/Iss. 70 Published In Pages: 263-284
By Rothstein, Bo, Torsello, Davide

Abstract

This article investigates how ideas of "public" and "private" goods can account for bribery and corruption. The authors hypothesize that societies that have a clear distinction between public and private goods will experience less corruption and societies with a more ambiguous distinction between public and private goods will experience more corruption. Findings mostly support this hypothesis.

Documents and Hypotheses Filed By:Megan Farrer