The Ideal Within: A Discourse and Hegemony Theoretical Analysis of the International Anticorruption Discourse

Nonfiction, Social & Cultural Studies, Political Science, Government, Public Policy, International, International Relations
Cover of the book The Ideal Within: A Discourse and Hegemony Theoretical Analysis of the International Anticorruption Discourse by Anja Carolin Gebel, Anja Carolin Gebel
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Anja Carolin Gebel ISBN: 9781301358748
Publisher: Anja Carolin Gebel Publication: September 8, 2013
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Anja Carolin Gebel
ISBN: 9781301358748
Publisher: Anja Carolin Gebel
Publication: September 8, 2013
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

During the past two decades fighting corruption became an important objective of manifold international and transnational actors. Yet this powerful international anticorruption agenda has so far avoided detailed scholarly scrutiny of the ways in which it potentially contributes to the construction and advancement of particular societal ideals. This thesis addresses this lack of systematic engagement by conducting a detailed empirical analysis of the international anticorruption discourse expressed in the form of anticorruption practices of the World Bank, Transparency International and the United Nations Development Programme on the strategic policy level. Adopting a post-Marxist discourse and hegemony theoretical perspective based on the work of Laclau and Mouffe, Nonhoff as well as Howarth and Glynos, it interrogates the international anticorruption discourse with regards to the kinds of societal ideals it constructs, the ways in which they are advanced, and the extent of consensus surrounding these ideals.

The thesis traces the surprisingly coherent ways in which the discourse is structured by a particular conception of human nature as self-interested and rational and centres on the manipulation of individual behaviour via institutional and cultural incentive structures. Importantly, it shows how this elevates the securing of governing processes that guarantee the stable pursuit of individual economic interests to the very purpose of societies. As the thesis demonstrates, this hegemonic project is expanded through the accommodation of a wide range of positively connoted concepts, anticorruption co-operations between powerful social actors, reliance on an objectivist kind of knowledge, and the elaborate construction of corruption as the enemy of a good society. While international anticorruption discourse is found to be broadly reflective of what can be called advanced liberal ideals of governing, the thesis enables an in-depth understanding of the manifold and complex discursive moves through which these particular ideals are constructed and advanced by the discourse.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

During the past two decades fighting corruption became an important objective of manifold international and transnational actors. Yet this powerful international anticorruption agenda has so far avoided detailed scholarly scrutiny of the ways in which it potentially contributes to the construction and advancement of particular societal ideals. This thesis addresses this lack of systematic engagement by conducting a detailed empirical analysis of the international anticorruption discourse expressed in the form of anticorruption practices of the World Bank, Transparency International and the United Nations Development Programme on the strategic policy level. Adopting a post-Marxist discourse and hegemony theoretical perspective based on the work of Laclau and Mouffe, Nonhoff as well as Howarth and Glynos, it interrogates the international anticorruption discourse with regards to the kinds of societal ideals it constructs, the ways in which they are advanced, and the extent of consensus surrounding these ideals.

The thesis traces the surprisingly coherent ways in which the discourse is structured by a particular conception of human nature as self-interested and rational and centres on the manipulation of individual behaviour via institutional and cultural incentive structures. Importantly, it shows how this elevates the securing of governing processes that guarantee the stable pursuit of individual economic interests to the very purpose of societies. As the thesis demonstrates, this hegemonic project is expanded through the accommodation of a wide range of positively connoted concepts, anticorruption co-operations between powerful social actors, reliance on an objectivist kind of knowledge, and the elaborate construction of corruption as the enemy of a good society. While international anticorruption discourse is found to be broadly reflective of what can be called advanced liberal ideals of governing, the thesis enables an in-depth understanding of the manifold and complex discursive moves through which these particular ideals are constructed and advanced by the discourse.

More books from International Relations

Cover of the book Talking to Terrorists by Anja Carolin Gebel
Cover of the book Overconfidence and Risk Taking in Foreign Policy Decision Making by Anja Carolin Gebel
Cover of the book Liberalizing Service Trade by Anja Carolin Gebel
Cover of the book Franz Ansprenger - Wie unsere Zukunft entstand. Von der Erfindung des Staates zur internationalen Politik - ein kritischer Leitfaden. by Anja Carolin Gebel
Cover of the book The Russian Job by Anja Carolin Gebel
Cover of the book Guerra alla verità by Anja Carolin Gebel
Cover of the book Living with the Dragon by Anja Carolin Gebel
Cover of the book Herbert Hoover and World Peace by Anja Carolin Gebel
Cover of the book Middle Powers and G20 Governance by Anja Carolin Gebel
Cover of the book The United Nations under Ban Ki-moon by Anja Carolin Gebel
Cover of the book Hanoi's War by Anja Carolin Gebel
Cover of the book Die Kuba-Krise. Ein Überblick by Anja Carolin Gebel
Cover of the book From Washington to Moscow by Anja Carolin Gebel
Cover of the book Indigenous Politics by Anja Carolin Gebel
Cover of the book L'Europa in trenta lezioni by Anja Carolin Gebel
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy