COVID-19

Myths of political independence: lessons for Vietnam

Crawford School of Public Policy | Asia & the Pacific Policy Society

Event details

Seminar

Date & time

Tuesday 22 July 2014
12.30pm–1.30pm

Venue

Acton Theatre, Level 1, JG Crawford Building 132, Lennox Crossing, ANU

Speaker

Professor Martin Painter, Emeritus Professor, Department of Public Policy, City University of Hong Kong.

Contacts

Sung Lee
6125 9563

Corruption is widely identified as a critical problem for developing economies and is also viewed as a priority issue by international organisations and donors. Governments in countries like Vietnam place anti-corruption high on their policy agenda. External observers regularly criticise them for not meeting their targets. However the problem with the critique is that it mostly places the blame on implementation failures when the issue is as much a design failure.

Templates for anti-corruption success in fact misread the practical lessons. One element of the standard template, the need for an ‘independent’ anti-corruption enforcement system, misreads the meaning and empirical reality of ‘independence’. In this seminar Professor Martin Painter will present evidence from Singapore, Hong Kong and Indonesia to show that their anti-corruption agencies are ‘independent’ more in the sense that they are powerful, rather than in the sense that they are apolitical.

He will also discuss the lessons for Vietnam, including how misleading design principles such as ‘political independence’ are a distraction from the task of strengthening the anti-corruption law enforcement system.

This seminar is presented by the Asia and the Pacific Policy Studies at Crawford School of Public Policy at The Australian National University, in partnership with the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade.

Updated:  27 April 2024/Responsible Officer:  Crawford Engagement/Page Contact:  CAP Web Team