The Routledge Handbook of Gender and Corruption showcases the most innovative and exciting research being conducted in this area of study, providing a comprehensive go-to reference for all who are interested in the topic.
In the last two decades, there has been an increasing awareness of the importance of understanding the nexus between gender and corruption in terms of understanding the way men and women experience corruption and the differential impact of anti-corruption frameworks on men and women, as well as an understanding of how women in different spaces affect the prevalence and kinds of corruption. This Handbook examines these issues as well as the role of social and gender norms in relation to corruption. This understanding is crucial for our ability to design anti-corruption frameworks that are effective and do not create unintended consequences for any group. Despite the importance of this issue, there remains a lack of in-depth, analytical, and geographically diverse investigations into the nexus of gender and corruption. This book addresses this gap by providing a comprehensive, multidisciplinary, geographically balanced treatise on gender and corruption. This book combines sectoral, thematic, and country-specific studies to allow readers to easily compare differing perspectives and approaches on cutting-edge issues and their implications for gender and corruption. Key sectors such as education, politics, public procurement, healthcare, sport, sanitation, and immigration are considered, as well as the role of new technologies, in supporting whistleblowing.
This Handbook provides academics, practitioners, and graduate researchers of public policy, public administration, law, and anti-corruption with all of the tools they need to understand the nuances of gender and corruption.
This Handbook showcases the most innovative and exciting research in this area, providing a go-to reference for all interested in the topic. It provides academics, practitioners, and graduate researchers of public policy, public administration, law, and anti-corruption with the tools needed to understand the nuances of gender and corruption.
PART I Overarching themes in gender and corruption
1. Framing the
discourse on gender and corruption
2. Gender and corruption: International
frameworks, challenges, and pathways for inclusive governance
3. Sexual
corruption: Emerging directions in research and policy
4. Sexual corruption:
The silent intersection between sexual violence and corruption
5. Gender,
corruption, and social norms: Findings from a study of the intersections of
gender norms and social norms driving corruption in primary healthcare
delivery in Nigeria PART II Corruption and gendered agency, access, and
participation
6. The symbolic effect of women in politics on trust in
parliament: A multilevel panel study
7. Gender representation and integrity
in criminal justice institutions in the Western Balkans
8. The presence of
women on boards has a moderating effect on masking bribery and corruption
9.
Women in high-level positions as perpetrators of corruption in Croatia
10.
Women as victims of corruption: Addressing gendered vulnerabilities
11.
Anonymizing technology, women, and whistleblowing
12. The impact of gendered
corruption on Moroccan women
13. Gendered clientelism and corruption: Are
women less corrupt than men in China? PART III Gender and corruption:
Perspectives and sectors
14. Gendered corruption barriers in public
procurement systems
15. Bids, bias, and barriers: Approaches and challenges
in using data to measure corruption and gender participation in public
procurement
16. The gendered impacts of corruption on womens health in
Southern Africa
17. Fighting corruption in water and sanitation services: A
South African perspective
18. Gendered forms of corruption in South African
public universities
19. Gender, corruption, and human trafficking
20. The
intersection between gender, human trafficking, and corruption by law
enforcement officials: A South African legislative perspective
21. Escape or
endure?: How corruption fuels womens migration intentions
22. Gender and
sport corruption
23. Conceptualizing the association between gender
(in)equality and corruption in sport governing bodies
24. Pedalling uphill:
Corruption and gender inequality in professional sports
25. Artificial
intelligence and corruption: Whistleblowing integrity systems to the rescue
26. Understanding gender and corruption: Domains and challenges
Sope Williams is Professor of Public Procurement Law and Deputy Director of the African Procurement Law Unit at Stellenbosch University, South Africa. Her research interests lie at the intersection of Public Procurement Law, anti-corruption, and gender.
Maria Krambia Kapardis is Professor of Accounting at Cyprus University of Technology. Her research interests are corruption and anti-corruption; ethical behaviour; fraud detection, investigation, and prevention; and ethical leadership and modern slavery.
Lisa A. Kihl is Professor of Sport Management in the School of Kinesiology at the University of Minnesota, USA, and Director of the Global Institute for Responsible Sport Organizations.