Part One: Etiology 1. Transparency International's "Corruption Perceptions Index"; April K. Clark 2. The Price of Corruption in Congress; Michael J. Pomante Ii and Scot Schraufnagel Part Two: Permeation of Corruption in Governance 3. Legislative Scandals in the United States; Kerri Milita and Jaclyn Bunch 4. Campaign Contributions and Vote Buying; Renee Prunty and Mandy Swartzendruber 5. Do Contributions to Judicial Campaigns Create the Appearance of Corruption?; Thomas E. Mcclure 6. Media Coverage of Corruption and Scandal in the 2016 Presidential Election: Fantasy Themes of Crooked Hillary and Corrupt Businessman Trump; John P. McHale Part Three: Policy Issues 7. Crime, Injustice and Politics; Cara E. Rabe-Hemp, Philip Mulvey and Morgan Foster 8. Mayors’ and Citizen Attitudes Toward Sexual Harassment in Police Departments; Eric E. Otenyo and Earlene A. Smith 9. Wars in Iraq and Afghanistan: Contractor Corruption and Election Campaigns; Eric E. Otenyo and Parwez Besmel Part Four: Oversight and Accountability 10. Citizens United and Political Accountability; Benjamin Bricker 11. Judicial Review; Elizabeth Erin Wheat 12. National Security Whistleblowers and the Journalists who tell their Stories: A Dangerous Policy Dance of Truth-Finding, Truth-Telling, And Consequence; Maria A. Moore, John Huxford, and Jennifer B. Bethmann
Nancy S. Lind is Professor of Politics and Government at Illinois State University, USA where she has taught for over 30 years. She has won University Distinguished Teaching and Service Awards and had edited/co-edited/co-author over a dozen books as well as written several peer reviewed journal articles. Her specialties are Public Administration and Policy and American Politics. Cara E. Rabe-Hemp is Professor in the Department of Criminal Justice Sciences at Illinois State University, USA. Her research interests include police diversity, citizen perceptions of the police, and police deviance and corruption. In 2010, Cara was awarded the University Research Initiative Award, in 2014 she was inducted into the College of Applied Sciences and Technology Academy of Achievement, and in 2016 she was awarded the College of Applied Sciences and Technology Outstanding Researcher Award.
Political science, criminal justice, and other scholars from the US
present 12 chapters on the nature and prevalence of corruption of
public officials in the US and the impact on public policy,
political stability, and public trust, and as well as how to
establish controls on discretion and stricter regulations to
increase accountability and corruption control. They consider the
measurement of public corruption and how scandal in Congress
influences congressional disapproval and the eroding of trust in
the national government; the influence of corruption, discretion,
and accountability on public governance at different levels, in the
legislative system in terms of the Jack Abramoff scandal, campaign
finance and the Citizens United decision, contributions to judicial
campaigns in Illinois, and the effects of media coverage of
corruption in terms of the 2016 presidential election; issues
involving the role of crime, politics, and media imagery in the
making of criminal justice policy, mayors’ and citizen attitudes
towards sexual harassment in police agencies, and contractor
corruption in leadership in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan; and
recommendations for oversight and accountability, including
accountability after Citizens United, judicial review, and national
security whistleblowers and journalists.
*(protoview.com)*
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