The Dark Side of Policy: The Case of the Anti-corruption Industry
(2024) In Revista de antropologia contemporanea 2023(2). p.385-411- Abstract
- Anthropologists of policy have tended to highlight the grand organizational initiatives that are quantitative, standardized and bureaucratic. This article proposes to understand these processes using the term ‘industry’ (as in ‘development industry’ or ‘human rights industry’). Used here, ‘industry’ is not a pejorative but a collection of features, the opposite of which could be called ‘craft’ (local, qualitative, improvisational, etc.). This article describes the emergence of the anti-corruption industry, based on an ideology of anti-corruptionism and the agendas and unintended consequences embedded in the anti-corruption project. Anthropologists of policy can benefit by identifying those features of social problem solving that lead to an... (More)
- Anthropologists of policy have tended to highlight the grand organizational initiatives that are quantitative, standardized and bureaucratic. This article proposes to understand these processes using the term ‘industry’ (as in ‘development industry’ or ‘human rights industry’). Used here, ‘industry’ is not a pejorative but a collection of features, the opposite of which could be called ‘craft’ (local, qualitative, improvisational, etc.). This article describes the emergence of the anti-corruption industry, based on an ideology of anti-corruptionism and the agendas and unintended consequences embedded in the anti-corruption project. Anthropologists of policy can benefit by identifying those features of social problem solving that lead to an industry-style policies. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/d458cac9-3c44-48ac-8347-d7665214288f
- author
- Sampson, Steven LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2024-05-01
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- Social anthropology, anthroplogy of policy, corruption, anti-corruptionism, anti-corruption, organization studies, anti-corruption industry, transparency, Transparency International
- in
- Revista de antropologia contemporanea
- volume
- 2023
- issue
- 2
- pages
- 26 pages
- publisher
- Societa Editrice Il Mulino
- ISSN
- 2724-3168
- DOI
- 10.48272/112575
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- d458cac9-3c44-48ac-8347-d7665214288f
- date added to LUP
- 2024-10-14 22:34:41
- date last changed
- 2025-04-04 13:54:54
@article{d458cac9-3c44-48ac-8347-d7665214288f, abstract = {{Anthropologists of policy have tended to highlight the grand organizational initiatives that are quantitative, standardized and bureaucratic. This article proposes to understand these processes using the term ‘industry’ (as in ‘development industry’ or ‘human rights industry’). Used here, ‘industry’ is not a pejorative but a collection of features, the opposite of which could be called ‘craft’ (local, qualitative, improvisational, etc.). This article describes the emergence of the anti-corruption industry, based on an ideology of anti-corruptionism and the agendas and unintended consequences embedded in the anti-corruption project. Anthropologists of policy can benefit by identifying those features of social problem solving that lead to an industry-style policies.}}, author = {{Sampson, Steven}}, issn = {{2724-3168}}, keywords = {{Social anthropology; anthroplogy of policy; corruption; anti-corruptionism; anti-corruption; organization studies; anti-corruption industry; transparency; Transparency International}}, language = {{eng}}, month = {{05}}, number = {{2}}, pages = {{385--411}}, publisher = {{Societa Editrice Il Mulino}}, series = {{Revista de antropologia contemporanea}}, title = {{The Dark Side of Policy: The Case of the Anti-corruption Industry}}, url = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/197420720/RACarticlefinalproofs28jan24.pdf}}, doi = {{10.48272/112575}}, volume = {{2023}}, year = {{2024}}, }