Repertorios discursivos sobre la corrupción política en Españaaproximación inicial

  1. Ariadna Rodríguez-Teijeiro 1
  2. Laura Román-Masedo 1
  1. 1 Universidade da Coruña
    info

    Universidade da Coruña

    La Coruña, España

    ROR https://ror.org/01qckj285

Journal:
RIPS: Revista de investigaciones políticas y sociológicas

ISSN: 1577-239X

Year of publication: 2018

Volume: 17

Issue: 2

Pages: 163-180

Type: Article

DOI: 10.15304/RIPS.17.2.5672 DIALNET GOOGLE SCHOLAR lock_openOpen access editor

More publications in: RIPS: Revista de investigaciones políticas y sociológicas

Sustainable development goals

Abstract

This research note presents the results of an innovative work in the study of the social perception of corruption in Spain. The usual sources for this type of analysis come from quantitative studies that measure the perception of corruption, either among experts (such as the well-known Transparency International Corruption Perception Index), or among the general population (as in the case of the Barometers of the Center for Sociological Research in Spain, or the Eurobarometers published by the European Commission). In our case, and starting from the conception of political corruption as a social construct, we opted for the analysis of the discourse of the participants in various discussion groups and focus groups conducted for a research carried out in the Autonomous Community of Galicia during the year 2015. Therefore, this work belongs to what specialists call “the third generation” of methodological tools to measure corruption, and its results show the richness of nuances that qualitative techniques contribute to the knowledge and analysis of this phenomenon.

Bibliographic References

  • ANDERSSON, Staffan y HEYWOOD, Paul M. (2009). “The Politics of Perception: Use and Abuse of Transparency International’s Approach to Measuring Corruption”. Political Studies, 57: 746-767.
  • ARNDT, Christiane y OMAN, Charles (2006). Uses and Abuses of Governance Indicators. OCDE Development Centre, París.
  • CENTRO DE INVESTIGACIONES SOCIOLÓGICAS. (2017). Barómetro Diciembre (Estudio nº 3199).
  • CONDE GUTIÉRREZ DEL ÁLAMO, Fernando (2009). Análisis sociológico del sistema de discursos. Madrid: Centro de Investigaciones Sociológicas.
  • DELLA PORTA, Donatella (2000). “Social Capital, Beliefs in Goverment, and Political Corruption”, en Susan J. Pharr y Robert D. Putnam (eds.), Disaffected Democracies. What’s Troubling the Trilateral Countries? Princeton: Princeton University Press.
  • GRAY, Cheryl W. y KAUFMAN, Daniel (1998). “Corruption and Development”. Finance and Development, 35: 7-10.
  • GÜEMES, Cecilia (2018). “La corrupción y la (des)confianza como normas sociales. Cambo de enfoque, nuevas perspectivas”. Revista Internacional de Transparencia e Integridad, 6.
  • HEINDRICH, Finn y HODESS, Robin (2011). “Measuring corruption” en Graycar, Adam y Smith, Russell G. (eds.) (2011). Handbook of Global Research and Practice on Corruption. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar.
  • HOLMES, Leslie (2015). Corruption. A very short introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • JIMÉNEZ, Fernando y VILLORIA, Manuel (2009). “Percepción social de la corrupción en España”. AFDUAM (Anuario de la Facultad de Derecho de la Universidad Autónoma de Madrid), 12: 169-183.
  • JIMÉNEZ, Fernando (2017). “Los efectos de la corrupción política sobre la desafección y el cambio político en España”. Revista Internacional de Transparencia e Integridad, 5.
  • KAUFMANN, Daniel (2004). “Corruption, governance and security: challenges for the rich countries and the world”, Global Competitiveness Report 2004/2005. Washington: Banco Mundial, 83-102.
  • KAUFMANN, Daniel y WEI, Shang-Jin (1999). “Does ‘grease money’ speed up the wheels of commerce?”. Washington D.C.: International Monetary Fund, Working Paper 00/64.
  • KNACK, Stephen (2007). “Measuring Corruption: a Critique of Indicators in Eastern Europe and Central Asia”. Journal of Public Policy, 27 (3): 255-291.
  • LAMBSDORFF, Johann Graf (2016). “Measuring Corruption. The Validity and Precision of Subjective Indicators (CPI)” en Sampford, Charles; Shacklock, Arthur; Connors, Carmel y Galtung, Fredrik (eds.) (2016). Measuring corruption. Londres: Routledge.
  • LUCIC, Danilo; GOLUBOVIC, Natasa y DZUNIC, Marija (2016). “Measuring corruption. Key issues, data sources and the most commonly used indicators”. Facta Universitatis (Serie: Economics and Organization), 13 (1): 101-115.
  • MALITO, Debora Valentina (2014). “Measuring Corruption Indicators and Indices”. European University Institute/Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies. Working Paper, 13.
  • MARTÍNEZ ROSÓN, María del Mar (2016). “Yo prefiero al corrupto: el perfil de los ciudadanos que eligen políticos deshonestos pero competentes”. Revista Española de Investigaciones Sociológicas, 153: 77-94.
  • MAURO, Paolo (1995). “Corruption and Growth”. The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 110 (3), 681-712.
  • MAURO, Paolo (1997). “The Effects of Corruption on Growth, Investment and Government Expenditure”. Washington D.C.: International Monetary Fund, Working Paper 96/98.
  • OLIVIER DE SARDAN, J-P (1999). “A Moral Economy of Corruption in Africa?”. The Journal of Modern African Studies 37(1): 25–52.
  • RAMIÓ, Carles. (2016). La renovación de la función pública: estrategias para frenar la corrupción política en España. Madrid: Los Libros de la Catarata.
  • RÍO, Adrián del; NAVARRO, Clemente J. y FONT, Joan (2016). “Ciudadanía, políticos y expertos en la toma de decisiones políticas: la percepción de las cualidades de los actores políticos importan”. Revista Española de Investigaciones Sociológicas, 154: 83-102.
  • ROHWER, Anja (2009). “Measuring Corruption: A Comparison between the Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index and the World Bank’s Worldwide Governance Indicators”. CESifo DICE Report 7 (3): 42-52. Munich: Ifo Institute for Economic Research.
  • SAMPFORD, Charles; SHACKLOCK, Arthur; CONNORS, CARMEL Y GALTUNG, Fredrik (eds.) (2016). Measuring corruption. Londres: Routledge.
  • TANZI, Vito (2002). “Corruption Around the World: Causes, Consequences, Scope and Cures” en Abed, George T., Gupta, Sanjeev (eds.) (2002). Governance, Corruption & Economic Performance. Washington D.C.: International Monetary Fund.
  • TANZI, Vito y DAVOODI, Hamid. (1997). “Corruption, public investment, and growth”, Washington D.C.: International Monetary Fund, Working Paper 97/139.
  • TÄNZLER, Dirk; MARAS, Konstandinos; GIANNAKOPOULOS, Angelos y ROGOWSKI, Ralf. (2012). “The Social Construction of Corruption: Theorethical Reflections” en Tänzler, Dirk; Maras, Konstandinos; Giannakopoulos, Angelos y Rogowski, Ralf. (eds.) (2012). The Social Construction of Corruption in Europe. Farnham: Ashgate.
  • TORCAL, Mariano (2014). “The Decline of Political Trust in Spain and Portugal: Economic Performance or Political Responsiveness?” American Behavioral Scientist, 58 (12): 1542-1567.
  • TORRES ALBERO, Cristobal (2015). España 2015. Situación social. Madrid: Centro de Investigaciones Sociológicas.
  • TREISMAN, Daniel (2007). “What have we learned about the causes of corruption from ten years of cross-national empirical research?”. Annual Review of Political Science, 10: 211-244.
  • VILLORIA, Manuel y JIMÉNEZ, Fernando (2012a). “¿Cuánta corrupción hay en España? Los problemas metodológicos de la medición de la corrupción (20042011)”. Revista de Estudios Políticos, 156: 13-47.
  • VILLORIA, Manuel y JIMÉNEZ, Fernando (2012b). “La corrupción en España (2004-2010): datos, percepción y efectos”. Revista Española de Investigaciones Sociológicas, 138: 109-134.
  • WARREN, Mark E. (2004). “What Does Corruption Mean in a Democracy?”. American Journal of Political Science, 18 (2): 328-343.
  • WEI, Shang-Jin (2000). “How taxing is corruption on international investors”. Review of Economics and Statistics, 82 (1): 1-11.