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Abstract

In Chapter 5, we return to the important motivation for the entire monograph. Much of the debate over corruption reform in developing countries has been about failure stories. Our analytical narrative focuses instead upon an enormous success in corruption reform, and lessons to be drawn from it. But this example occurred years ago and far away, in both distance and potentially in economic and cultural conditions, from contemporary developing economies. We do not intend to suggest that Parker’s specific reforms as such should be the guide for current corruption reform efforts. Parker’s specific policies were applicable to and successful for Los Angeles in the 1950s. What we do believe is that the conditions that we identified in Chapter 4 that supported Parker’s efforts can be generalized across time and circumstances. Thus, we examine the importance of political contestability, a free media, and a focal system of values in the context of the current debate over corruption reform in developing countries. We close with an application to the novel “Charter Cities” movement.

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Notes

  1. The reason practitioners promote the four eyes principle is that it increases the likelihood of detection. This experimental design does not capture an increase in the likelihood of detection that comes from having a second person. Another reason to promote the four eyes principle is that it can invoke shame from participants in the group. The experiment is context-free rather than context-rich; this difference could matter.

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  2. The ability for media to transmit values has gained recent attention in economics with soap operas being linked to the reduction of fertility rates in Brazil (Chong et al. 2008) and the belief that television shows altered the perception of women in India (Jensen and Oster 2009).

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  3. The selection process for “good leadership” can be precarious. Some elected leaders are believed to be men and women of integrity; however, their tenure tells a different story. For example, Jean-Bertrand Aristide was elected in 1990 with overwhelming support. Haitians believed the former Catholic Priest, Aristide represented a higher-calling and would usher in a different kind of government—they were wrong (Dupuy 2007). In other countries democratic elections frequently trade one unscrupulous leader for another. The identification of good leadership is a difficult exercise but that does not diminish its importance.

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  4. While heterogeneity represents an additional challenge to combating corruption in some locales there are mechanisms to overcome those problems. While people might have different ethnic identities groups can form along other salient dimensions. Also, the power of the media and other educational outlets should not be underestimated. Buchanan pointed out the power of the preacher to make heterogeneous beliefs more homogeneous.

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  5. The struggle to preserve media freedom persists in many countries. Citizens in both Cote d’Ivoire and South Africa have worried that their government will attempt to snare control of the media (Southall 2010).

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  6. The Los Angeles Examiner was part of the Hearst chain.

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  7. “Hong Kong: The Facts” and “Is the Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) Really Doing Its Job?” accessed at http://www.icac.org.hk on April 5, 2011.

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© 2013 R. Mark Isaac and Douglas A. Norton

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Isaac, R.M., Norton, D.A. (2013). Application to Economic Development. In: Just the Facts Ma’am: A Case Study of the Reversal of Corruption in the Los Angeles Police Department. Palgrave Pivot, New York. https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137354396_5

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