Corruption,Trust and their Public Sector Consequences: Introduction to the Special Edition |
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Authors: | Scott A. Fritzen Søren Serritzlew Gert Tinggaard Svendsen |
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Affiliation: | 1. Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy , National University of Singapore , Singapore;2. Department of Political Science , Aarhus University , Aarhus , Denmark |
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Abstract: | Abstract Corruption and trust are two important determinants of the quality of public sectors. Empirical studies in different literatures suggest that corruption and trust have effects on factors such as economic growth, the quality of democratic institutions, life quality, the size and effectiveness of the public sector and much more. The purpose of this special issue – one that goes to the heart of the comparative policy ethos which is central to the journal's mission – is to draw on a number of country examples to shed light on the state of the literature on the connection between corruption and trust. The aim is to show that these two concepts are highly relevant to each other, and that their interconnections are important to understand the public sector consequences of corruption and trust. By focusing on these concepts, we hope that this special issue can pave the road for further comparative research. |
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