Political corruption: Difference between revisions

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Alternative approaches, such as the British aid agency's Drivers of Change research, skips numbers and promotes understanding corruption via political economy analysis of who controls power in a given society.<ref name="commons.globalintegrity.org"/> Another approach suggested is to look at the bodyfat of officials when conventional measures of corruption are unavailable, after finding that obesity of cabinet ministers in [[Eastern Bloc|post-Soviet states]] was highly correlated with more accurate measures.<ref>{{cite web |title=Are overweight politicians less trustworthy? |date=30 Jul 2020 |publisher=[[The Economist]]|url=https://www.economist.com/graphic-detail/2020/07/30/are-overweight-politicians-less-trustworthy |accessdate=23 Dec 2020}}</ref><ref>{{cite paper |title=Obesity of politicians and corruption in post-Soviet countries |last=Blavatskyy |first=Pavlo |date=18 Jul 2020 |doi=10.1111/ecot.12259 |journal=Economics of Transition and Institutional Change |volume=2020 |issue=00 |pages=1-14}}</ref>
 
Recent studies also attempt to use objective measures of corruption<ref></https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/0010414020938102> but these data are relatively scarce.
 
==Institutions dealing with political corruption==