Abstract
How can institutional corruption be combatted? While recent years have seen
a growth in anti-corruption literature, examples of countries rooting out systemic
corruption remain few. The lack of success stories has sparked an academic debate
about the theoretical foundations of anti-corruption frameworks: primarily between
proponents of the principal-agent framework and those seeing systemic corruption
as the result of collective-action problems. Through an analysis of current principalagent
and collective action anti-corruption literature, this article adds two additional
arguments to the debate: (a) the need to specify what one talks about when talking
about systemic corruption and (b) the necessity to move beyond the principal-agent
versus collective action frameworks dichotomy towards a policy-centered approach
for how to combat institutional corruption. Having outlined how institutional corruption
can be seen as one type of systemic corruption, this article shows how a
policy-centered approach such as strengthening the appearance standard through an
independent public commission can address theoretical mechanisms emphasized
in each anti-corruption frameworkâthus arguing that the frameworks complement
rather than rival each other. The article ends by arguing for an anti-corruption discourse
acknowledging that a multifaceted problem such as corruption requires multiple
frameworks rather than attempts for silver-bullet explanations.