2 869 855 libros electrónicos en 110 idiomas
¿No le conviene? No hay problema. Puedes devolver los artículos hasta 30 días
No se equivocará con un vale de regalo. El destinatario puede elegir cualquier producto de nuestra oferta.
Hasta 30 días para devoluciones
If you open a newspaper anywhere in the world today, you are likely to find a story about a betrayed trust. You will read of a prime minister ousted over illicit campaign funding, a multinational bank fined for laundering cartel money, or a colossal infrastructure project that crumbled because the contractors diluted the concrete to pay for the bribes. Corruption is the universal undercurrent of the daily news cycle. Yet, for all our collective outrage, our understanding of the phenomenon often remains remarkably superficial.
This book, Corruption, was born from a deep frustration with that superficiality. For too long, public discourse has treated corruption as a moral aberration-a localized infection caused by a few "bad apples" in an otherwise healthy barrel. We look at impoverished nations and assume their graft is a symptom of their poverty, confidently believing that economic development will act as a natural cure. We draw artificial lines between the public and private spheres, treating the politician who takes a bribe as a traitor to the state, while sometimes dismissing the corporate executive who pays it as merely a shrewd operator "doing business."
In these pages, I seek to dismantle those comforting illusions.
To truly understand corruption, we must step back from moral indignation and approach the subject with clinical precision. We must recognize that the abuse of entrusted power for private gain is not a malfunction of human society; it is the gravitational pull of human nature. The default setting of our species is to favor ourselves, our kin, and our immediate tribe. The creation of a modern, impartial state-where public wealth is strictly separated from private purses-is a magnificent, but highly unnatural, architectural feat. Maintaining it is akin to fighting entropy.
This book is designed as a comprehensive map of that fight. It traces the shadow of power from its earliest historical origins in the river valleys of Mesopotamia to the philosophical debates of the Roman Republic, and onward to the birth of the rational bureaucracy. But it does not dwell solely in the past. It ruthlessly dissects the modern mechanics of graft across both the public and private sectors, exposing the devastating interplay where corporate wealth captures state regulation.
Crucially, we will confront the "Development Paradox," exploring the uncomfortable reality that modernization does not eradicate corruption-it merely forces it to evolve into more sophisticated, institutionalized syndromes. Finally, we will look to the shifting battlegrounds of the twenty-first century, where the offshore archipelago, cryptocurrency, and the influx of trillions in climate finance present unprecedented new challenges.
Eradicating corruption entirely is an impossible dream. But understanding its history, its psychology, and its systemic mechanics is the first vital step in containing it. It is my hope that this book equips citizens, students, and policymakers with the analytical tools necessary to see past the illusions of power, recognizing that the fight against corruption is not a war to be definitively won, but an eternal vigil to be maintained.
¡Hola! Soy Libroamiko, tu asesor de libros.
¿Cómo puedo ayudarte?