"This was the first of two workshops, which aimed to analyse the impact of recent and current economic reforms on corruption with a view to identifying the sources of corrupt incentives, as well as possible ways of addressing corruption – within the framework of either existing or alternative reform models. The thesis implicit in the title, is that globalisation together with market liberalisation policies have combined to produce a new political economy of corruption - i.e. a new set of interactions between political processes and economic policies that have given rise to new sources of, and conduits for, corruption.
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