Date of Award

2013-01-01

Degree Name

Master of Fine Arts

Department

Political Science

Advisor(s)

Taeko Hiroi

Abstract

Providing a definition built on the agency relationship between voters and public officials, this study presents an institutional approach to the causes of political corruption. I argue that higher levels of political party institutionalization reduce political corruption. Institutionalized political party systems help to overcome collective problems among voters within democracies. By increasing levels of accountability, institutionalized political party systems alter public officials' incentives towards a cleaner exercise of the public power. Focusing on different strategies adopted by political parties, I analyze the effectiveness of the constraints imposed on public officials' corrupt behavior within democracies. On the one hand, institutionalization of political party systems increases the incentives for political parties to monitor public officials' performance due to their need to create and protect brand-name capital. On the

other hand, institutionalization of the political party systems, by supplying low cost information, allows the constituencies to exercise retrospective and prospective voting, strengthen credible commitments in sanctioning abuses in the public officials' use of power. Characterization of the party system in terms of institutionalization demonstrates how having a democratic system does not ensure effectiveness of political controls against political corruption. The analysis provides a quantitative analysis based on a cross-national sample of eighteen Latin American countries, and a qualitative analysis of the causal relationship in Colombia.

Language

en

Provenance

Received from ProQuest

File Size

153 pages

File Format

application/pdf

Rights Holder

Susan Achury

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