Preventing and Combatting Corruption: Good Governance and Constitutional Law in Tunisia
6 June 2013
<p>This paper approaches the pervasive problem of political corruption from
the perspective of constitutional design, and considers how a
constitution can set out principles, rights, institutions and mechanisms
that contribute to the prevention and combatting of corruption. Indeed,
corruption, massive looting of state resources by the highest
authorities, and frustrations stemming from cronyism were important
factors in the discontent that sparked the Arab Spring in Tunisia, and
later Egypt and Libya. The success of the constitutional transition in
Tunisia and throughout the region, then, depends in part on the extent
to which the reconstituted democratic state can weed out corruption and
prevent future corruption. Read the full article here:
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