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Ethical Conduct and Perceptions of Public Probity in Britain

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Important to distinguish two levels' of the impact of corruption ... Electoral Commission (2000) Standards Board for England (2001) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ethical Conduct and Perceptions of Public Probity in Britain


1
Ethical Conduct and Perceptions of Public Probity
in Britain
  • The Story so Far

2
Introduction
  • Important to distinguish two levels of the
    impact of corruption
  • We cannot know what counts as corruption without
    knowing about moral codes
  • Moral codes are central to how the authorities
    respond to corruption

3
Structure of paper
  • Evidence of growing levels of concern about
    corruption/integrity and what has been
    responsible for it
  • What we know about public perceptions (esp. types
    of behaviour seen as acceptable how far
    behaviour in fact seen as acceptable how far
    officers holders perceived as accountable)
  • Impact on perceptions of policy response

4
(1) Growing levels of concern
  • Prima facie, concern has been rising evidence
  • Three sets of indicators serve to establish the
    point
  • 1) survey data
  • 2) media reports
  • 3) committees of enquiry and government
  • initiatives

5
CPI data
6
Media reports
7
Official measures
  • 1948 Lynskey Tribunal
  • 1969 Select Committee on Members Interests
  • The Poulson Affair ?Redcliffe-Maud inquiry
    Salmon enquiry two parliamentary enquiries
  • Nolan differed from previous initiatives in
    terms of (a) longevity (b) nature of its
    recommendations (c) impact of its work

8
Causes of growing concern
  • End of Cold War and its impact on the nature of
    party competition
  • Shift from party- to candidate-centred
    campaigning and development of mass media
  • Unprecedentedly rapid change in values
  • Objective increase in midconduct (as legacy of
    Thatcher and decline in party membership)?

9
(2) Public perceptions
  • The standards of behaviour people expect of
    public officials strict and unrealistic?
  • Perceptions of the extent to which public
    officials live up to the expectations different
    perceptions of front-line vs remoter officials
  • Little confidence in mechanisms for holding
    officials to account media perceived as more
    effective than the authorities

10
How are we to interpret the data?
  • Perceptions tend to be stable over time
  • Therefore we seem to be in the presence of
    generalised impressions rather than specific
    beliefs informed by knowledge
  • Therefore peoples beliefs are contradictory
  • Therefore they strike us as immature

11
What are the characteristics likely to give rise
to the syndrome?
  • Socio-demographic variables are not significantly
    related to it
  • Attitudinal characteristics are
  • Logistic regression suggests the two most
    important are
  • 1) degree of interpersonal trust
  • 2) sense of political efficacy

12
(3) The role of the policy response
  • The way in which policy has been formulated
  • The substance of the policy enacted and
    implemented
  • The effectiveness and impact of the policy

13
The way in which policy has been formulated
  • Office of the Parliamentary Commissioner for
    Standards (1995)
  • Propriety and Ethics Team in Cabinet Office
  • Office of the Commissioner for Public
    Appointments (1995)
  • Electoral Commission (2000)
  • Standards Board for England (2001)

14
The substance of the policy enacted and
implemented
  • 1995 code of coduct for MPs
  • 1998 Public Interest Disclosure Act
  • 2000 Local Government Act
  • 2000 Political Parties, Elections and Referendums
    Act
  • Advisory Committee on Business Appointments
  • 2000 Freedom of Information Act
  • 2001 Anti-terrorism, Crime and Security Act

15
The effectiveness and impact of the policy
  • Despite the volume of legislation, impression is
    that concern remains high (paradoxically perhaps
    because of the legislation)
  • Integrity remains high on the political agenda
    because of the expansive way the Standards
    Committee has carried out its remit
  • Integrity remains high on the political agenda
    because of the inherent difficulties of rules
    designed to deliver it

16
Conclusion
  • Causes of growing concern the way in which
    political/social changes have impacted on media
    agenda setting
  • Growing concern has given rise to generalised
    cynicism
  • Paradoxically, efforts to address anxieties keep
    anxieties alive self-negating prophecy

17
Conclusion
  • Political corruption and similar forms of
    misconduct are an extreme form of the sacrifice
    of principles to the demands of practical
    politics. We suspect that public perceptions and
    attitudes are unlikely to change until such time
    as a way can be found to supplant the
    non-ideological, practical politics of early
    twenty-first century Britain with the more
    principled disagreements that animated politics
    before the rise of Margaret Thatcher and her New
    Labour imitators.
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