Public good or private good? The paradox of public and private ethics in the context of developing countries

This article questions the view that corruption is part of the features of collectivist cultures. Whilst acknowledging that there are cultural differences in ethical and social norms, it argues that corruption is more likely due to social and economic realities and the disconnection between societal...

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Veröffentlicht in:Public administration and development 2006-05, Vol.26 (2), p.135-145
Hauptverfasser: Hellsten, Sirkku, Larbi, George A.
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creator Hellsten, Sirkku
Larbi, George A.
description This article questions the view that corruption is part of the features of collectivist cultures. Whilst acknowledging that there are cultural differences in ethical and social norms, it argues that corruption is more likely due to social and economic realities and the disconnection between societal values and the values of formal public institutions. Also the failing of public trust leads into communitarian solidarity‐networks within a state, which strive for the common good of particular social collectives rather than the national public good. In designing strategies to improve ethics and control corruption in the public sector we need to understand the social and economic conditions under which public duty and the ethical standards required from them tend to compete with the private moral commitments and social obligations of officials. The article suggests using civic education to diffuse the values of public service, and the rights and obligations of citizenship more widely in society. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/pad.406
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source PAIS Index; Wiley-Blackwell Full Collection; EBSCOhost Business Source Complete; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); EBSCOhost Political Science Complete
subjects Civic education
Collectivism
Corruption
Cultural differences
culture
Developing countries
Ethical dilemmas
Ethics
integrity
LDCs
Morality
Public administration
Public good
Public goods
Public management
Public sector
Public-private partnership
Socioeconomic factors
Studies
Values
title Public good or private good? The paradox of public and private ethics in the context of developing countries
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