A Genealogy of Corruption. Administrative Malpractice and Political Modernizatio...
A Genealogy of Corruption. Administrative Malpractice and Political Modernization in Eighteenth Century Wallachia
The transition from the Old Regime to modern European states in the 18th and 19th centuries entailed a transformation in the meaning of corruption. While seen as a moral failure from Antiquity to the Early Modern period, with the...
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Información proyecto GenCorr
Duración del proyecto: 36 meses
Fecha Inicio: 2020-03-25
Fecha Fin: 2023-03-31
Fecha límite de participación
Sin fecha límite de participación.
Descripción del proyecto
The transition from the Old Regime to modern European states in the 18th and 19th centuries entailed a transformation in the meaning of corruption. While seen as a moral failure from Antiquity to the Early Modern period, with the separation of the public and private domains in the 18th and 19th centuries, corruption came to be strictly defined as the abuse of public office. Until now, this particular transition has been studied only in Western and Northern Europe and in North America, where the reduced level of administrative corruption came to be seen as part and parcel of successful state-building. Although corruption in Southeastern Europe has received ample attention, it has been mostly treated as a quasi-natural characteristic of the region, and completely ignored as a problem of governance. My project addresses this problem by scrutinizing the emergence of the problem of administrative malpractice in the long 18th century Wallachia. Based on archival and published sources (judicial decisions, regulations, chronicles, travelogues etc.), the project offers the first systematic study of the practices which can be called corrupt, of the discourses about corruption and of the reaction of contemporaries to this phenomenon. The importance of the project lies in throwing light on processes of modernization in Southeastern Europe prior to the adoption of the Western cultural and political model during the 19th century.