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Fernando Miramontes
May 03, 2023
In News
Call for Papers 2023 Annual Corruption in the Global South Network Conference “Critical Approaches to Corruption and Transparency" November 19-20th New School for Social Research New York City In a quote posted to the White House website (2021), President Joe Biden states that “corruption threatens United States national security, economic equity, global anti-poverty and development efforts, and democracy itself.” Narrowly defined as “abuse of power for private gain” (TI 2022) but imbued with broader connotations of systematic social decay (Pierce 2016), corruption has emerged in the post-Cold War era as a signifier of a whole array of grievances associated with economic underdevelopment. Reflecting this growing preoccupation with corruption, the international community formed a sprawling ‘anti-corruption industry’ (Sampson 2010) consisting of numerous international conventions, national and local reform packages, and funding mechanisms for aspiring reformers. While global anti-corruptionism has helped put a spotlight on corruption, it has also served to reproduce and justify inequalities in the capitalist world-system by equating corruption with democratic deficit and by echoing colonial discourses of “backwardness” and dependency. Fighting corruption has become a moral imperative, characterized by a strong sense of urgency (Kaufmann 2009) that justifies punitiveness against transgressors, legitimizes lavish spending, and discourages critical examination of neoliberal solutions. With an array of social actors, ranging from populist politicians to grassroots movements, judges and corporations, claiming ownership of anti-corruption to advance their own agendas, this emergent industry has, in many ways, worsened the social problems it purports to ameliorate. On November 19-20, 2023, the Corruption in the Global South Research Consortium, in collaboration with the Sociology Department at the New School for Social Research, will hold a two-day symposium in New York City dedicated to the study of corruption and anti-corruption in the era of neoliberalism and its historical antecedents. The goal of this symposium is to explore the different ways that corruption and anti-corruption have emerged from, and contributed to, the late capitalist world order. With this call, we invite submissions from junior and senior scholars across different disciplines and methodological approaches, who work at the intersection of corruption, anti-corruption and structural inequalities associated with neoliberalism, (neo)colonialism, and other manifestations of late capitalism. To participate in the symposium, please submit a 200-300 word abstract of a paper that you would like to present to Marina Zaloznaya (marina-zaloznaya@uiowa.edu) by noon on June 1st. Selected participants will be notified by June 15th, and their full papers will be due on October 15th.
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Fernando Miramontes
Nov 21, 2022
In News
The 11th virtual roundtable on measuring corruption will be held on November 29 (Tuesday) from 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM (Central European Time – CET). This time, the discussion will focus on quantifying illicit financial flows. An introductory presentation will be given by Dr. Miroslav Palansky (Charles University) followed by a combination of Q&A and open-floor discussion. Dr. Palansky is a Data Scientist at the Tax Justice Network (producers of the biennial Financial Secrecy Index), a Research Fellow with the CORPTAX group at the Institute of Economic Studies, Charles University, Prague, and a Research Fellow of the EU Tax Observatory. His research relates to illicit financial flows, tax havens, financial secrecy, and corruption. If you would like to join, please email me at jpozsgai@hus.osaka-u.ac.jp with a quick line about your area of expertise (if needed). As before, the meeting intends to bring together a small number of specialists to have an informal conversation about the measurement of corruption. This will be the eleventh installment of a series of meetings planned for 2022-23.
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