Diagnosing Corruption in Ethiopia : Perceptions, Realities, and the Way Forward for Key Sectors

For decades, corruption in Ethiopia has been discussed only at the margins. Perhaps because many have not experienced corruption as a significant constraint to their lives and businesses, or perhaps because a culture of circumspection has dampened open dialogue, Ethiopia has seen neither the information flows nor the debate on corruption that most other countries have seen in recent years. To address this information gap, the World Bank agreed with the government of Ethiopia and its Federal Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission (FEACC) to undertake research and produce an independent overview of corruption, identify follow-up actions to these diagnostics, and articulate the proposed approach in an anti-corruption strategy and action plan for Ethiopia. This publication fulfills the first stage of the process through a set of preliminary studies that map the nature of corruption in eight Ethiopian sectors, focusing on three key objectives: 1) develop sector frameworks that enable mapping of the potential areas of corruption on a sector-by-sector basis; 2) map the different forms and types of corrupt practices in the selected sectors; and 3) consider the higher-risk areas and identify appropriate sector or crosscutting responses for government and other stakeholders.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Plummer, Janelle
Format: Publication biblioteca
Language:en_US
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank 2012
Subjects:Accountability, accountability relationship, anti-corruption, Anti-Corruption Strategy, Bribery, Bribery Conventions, Bribes, capacity building, capacity development, citizens, civil service, civil service reforms, civil society, civil society engagement, Community Driven Development, corruption issues, Corruption Perceptions, Corruption Perceptions Index, CPI, decision making, discretion, economic development, enabling environment, evaluators, fighting corruption, Figures, financial institution, financial institutions, Financial sector, Financial sector reforms, Fiscal, Fiscal Decentralization, fraud, good government, governance environment, governance issues, Governance Reform, Governance Reforms, human rights, income, inequality, institutional reforms, institutional strengthening, institutional structure, international organizations, laws, legal framework, Money Laundering, openness, Perceptions Index, political power, Poverty Reduction, priorities, Procurement, public expenditure, public expenditures, Public Institutions, public officials, public sector, public sector management, Public Service, Public Service Delivery, rule of law, smuggling, social policies, stakeholders, state intervention, TransparencyCorruption, Corruption in government, Public administration, Desk review, Public sector reform, Good governance, Anti corruption efforts, Money laundering, Corrupt practices, Terrorist fundraising, Counterterrorism, Fraud, Governance reform,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/13091
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