Political Corruption: In Beyond the Nation StateRoutledge, 16 ¸.¤. 2003 - 264 ˹éÒ This book, combining scholarship with readability, shows that political corruption must itself be analysed politically. Spectacularly corrupt politicians - the exception rather than the rule - are usually symptoms, not causes, and much political corruption is simply normal politics taken to excess. But in a world in which anti-corruption strategies themselves are often thinly disguised examples of political corruption, the ways in which political systems address their own corruption are as varied and fascinating in character as crucial to comprehend. A valuable read for anyone studying social science disciplines such as politics, international relations, sociology, anthropology, criminology and public policy. As well as the global community of anti-corruption activists, professional politicians, police, business people and lawyers. |
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... problems and by a sound knowledge base within the areas where the challenges occur. Good problem solvers also tend to be motivated primarily by the interest and endeavour inherent in the problems themselves, rather than by external ...
... problems and by a sound knowledge base within the areas where the challenges occur. Good problem solvers also tend to be motivated primarily by the interest and endeavour inherent in the problems themselves, rather than by external ...
˹éÒ 6
... problems are said to be “NP-hard” (non-deterministic polynomial-time hard). In fact, in many cases, combinatorial optimization problems are NP-hard ... Problems 1.2. Vehicle routing problems 1.2.1. Problems in transportation optimization.
... problems are said to be “NP-hard” (non-deterministic polynomial-time hard). In fact, in many cases, combinatorial optimization problems are NP-hard ... Problems 1.2. Vehicle routing problems 1.2.1. Problems in transportation optimization.
˹éÒ 16
... problem. If the equation, initial and boundary conditions of each problem have an identical form, then the problems are said to be similar. Let us denote by D, the domain of variation (x, t) in problem (I), and by DII the domain of ...
... problem. If the equation, initial and boundary conditions of each problem have an identical form, then the problems are said to be similar. Let us denote by D, the domain of variation (x, t) in problem (I), and by DII the domain of ...
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... problems, while sleeping problems, rather than amounts of crying at 5 months, predicted sleeping problems at later ages. Melissa Wake and colleagues' Australian longitudinal study of 483 first-born infants (Wake et al., 2006), too ...
... problems, while sleeping problems, rather than amounts of crying at 5 months, predicted sleeping problems at later ages. Melissa Wake and colleagues' Australian longitudinal study of 483 first-born infants (Wake et al., 2006), too ...
˹éÒ 22
... problem is evident , and the same may be said of similar problems found in many of our modern algebra texts . The results of giving such problems to our pupils to solve were very unsatisfactory . From the pupils ' own introspection ...
... problem is evident , and the same may be said of similar problems found in many of our modern algebra texts . The results of giving such problems to our pupils to solve were very unsatisfactory . From the pupils ' own introspection ...
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the contribution | 33 |
the Peoples Republic | 65 |
the United Kingdom | 97 |
international | 134 |
organized crime | 165 |
Conclusion | 199 |
Bibliography | 220 |
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