Democratic values and corruption
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This is the time of year to reflect on both anticorruption and human rights as their international days of recognition come in succession. The links are especially salient this year as the International Anti-Corruption Conference has the theme of defending democratic values. The need to reinvigorate efforts to control corruption is widely acknowledged, as is the concern about shrinking civic space in many countries. These two agendas are increasingly connected.
While there may not exist a consensus list of “democratic values”, I think many would agree that certain values would be on the list: the ability to shape government policies that affect you; the opportunity to speak out and hold government officials accountable; the principle that everyone should be treated equally.
Word cloud based on the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
In 2018, the Pew Charitable Trust asked respondents in America about 16 democratic values and how important they are for the country. Top responses highlighted the importance of respect for rights and freedoms and of serious consequences for elected officials who engage in misconduct. Core governance themes received strong support, including independence of the judiciaries, open and transparent government, independence of the media. Many of these fundamental values are also essential for controlling corruption. Reinforcing these democratic values can help control corruption.
Conversely, sextortion to grand schemes to siphon off public assets, corruption affords selective benefits to those who circumvent the rules rather than those who follow them.
From the micro level of bribes for services toWith support from the Human Rights, Inclusion and Empowerment Trust Fund, we are exploring the links between corruption and human rights and the various channels through which they move together or in opposition. While free and independent media, access to information, and rights of participation may align with both human rights and control of corruption, the relationship can also be complex as with the recent European Court of Justice decision that beneficial ownership registers violate the right to privacy. And in some places, anticorruption campaigns have been seen as tools for repression, used selectively to stifle opponents.
Universal Periodic Review of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights cite efforts to control corruption among their accomplishments, and more than 40 percent of the linked UN reports similarly cite corruption.
Our preliminary research suggests that around 60 percent of national reports in response to theThe importance of the connection between these rights-based values and controlling corruption is not just symbolic. The confluence of the two agendas—and their motivating power—were clear when the indignity of bribes sparked the Arab Spring. A decade of disappointment followed as the story became one of authoritarianism, violence, and civil war rather than hope and reform.
The fact that some institutions of good governance, such as the right to information and right to public participation are both fundamental human rights (Articles 19 and 21, respectively, of the Universal Declaration) and important tools for accountability suggests that messaging and advocacy can effectively draw on both motivations.
The human and societal costs of corruption are enormous, and although it can’t be eliminated it can be controlled. Strengthening delivery on democratic values and human rights can help and be helped by greater attention to control of corruption. These mutually reinforcing agendas can become vicious circles or virtuous circles—it is up to all of us to make it virtuous.
Join the Conversation
"Everyone should be treated equally" (your words above) is an ideal that will eliminate poverty by giving an equal opportunity to everybody, both to earn and to live in a suitable place and for fair rights for access to education for their children. It also suggests a nationalized health scheme.
But most significant is the failure for equal rights to our natural resources, and since most of the significant ones are already owned, we need a common means for the collection of their benefits for national use. This can be achieved by the principle of Henry George in his classic "Progress and Poverty" in 1879, by what he called "The Single Tax", which is on land values. An alternative would be for all these resources to be owned by the government (having purchased them, after they are put up for sale) and for the occupiers/users to pay a lease-fee, without any other form of tax being applied or being necessary and coercive.
This is good reading. Indeed, the corruption violates fundamental rights by disproportionately affecting the vulnerable and poor. Having worked in the space for a number of years, it’s evident that one feeds into the other. However, they are handled as separate it’s and I suggest that this needs to change in order to reap from synergies.