Publication | Closed Access
Prospection in Individual and Interpersonal Corruption Dilemmas
81
Citations
125
References
2016
Year
NegotiationBehavioral Decision MakingIndividual CorruptionSocial PsychologyLawSocial InfluenceInterpersonal Corruption DilemmasProspective CognitionPsychologySocial SciencesCollective Action ProblemEntrusted PowerFinancial CrimeBehavioral SciencesBriberyTrustApplied Social PsychologyMoral PsychologyCorruptionCorruption StudiesSocial BehaviorGovernmental CorruptionBusinessAccountability
Corruption represents 1 of the main societal challenges of our time. At present, there is no theoretical framework distinguishing the prospective decision-making processes involved in different acts of corruption. We differentiate between 2 broad categories of corrupt acts that have different implications for prospective cognition: individual corrupt acts, which refer to a power holder individually abusing entrusted power; and interpersonal corrupt acts, which refer to a power holder abusing entrusted power in collaboration with other corrupt agents. We model the decision structure as 2 inherently different social dilemmas: individual corruption requires a power holder to prospect own and collective consequences, whereas interpersonal corruption requires a prospection of self-interest, the interest of corrupt partner(s) conflict and collective interests (nested social dilemma). Individual and interpersonal corruption rest on different prospective decision-making processes, which we illustrate along intrapersonal factors (prospection of costs and benefits, self-control, guilt) and interpersonal factors (social norms, trust). We explore the advantages of this novel distinction for theory development, experimental corruption research, as well as anticorruption efforts.
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