Individual Responsibility under Systemic Corruption: A Coercion-Based View

Moral Philosophy and Politics 10 (1):95-117 (2023)
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Abstract

Should officeholders be held individually responsible for submitting to systemically corrupt institutional practices? We draw a structural analogy between individual action under coercive threat and individual participation in systemic corruption, and we argue that officeholders who submit to corrupt institutional practices are not excused by the existence of a systemic coercive threat. Even when they have good personal reasons to accept the threat, they remain individually morally assessable and, in the circumstances, they are also individually blameworthy for actions performed in their institutional capacity.

Author Profiles

Carla Bagnoli
University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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