Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on The Establishment of an Effective Anti-corruption Authority in Africa. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 60 page paper examines the continent of Africa. How corruption can be fought in the various countries with the implementation of a controlling authority is discussed. An organization is created to address the corruption in African countries. Methods of detecting and preventing corruption are looked at. An organization is created and for that organization administrative requirements are discussed, inclusive of staff recruitment and qualifications. How a director would be hired and what his role would be is a part of the paper. Additionally, how the organization would be managed and the role of the police are issues addressed. This is all included after an outline of how corruption has manifested in Africa over the years. Appendices provide an outline for the organization. Bibliography lists 17 sources.
Page Count:
60 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RT13_SA522A.rtf
Buy This Term Paper »
 
Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
glance. Africa is a continent plagued with a myriad of problems, but it is not the only continent to face problems with corruption. Corruption is found in every nation and
in many facets of the community. Corruption is found in politics as well as in police departments. Yet, corruption is not something acceptable. In fact, there seems to be a
consensus to suggest that the failure of initiatives designed to help is due to the prevalent regional corruption (Richards, Nwanna & Nwankwo, 2003). In other words, corruption is holding
things back for the African nations. The general conception is that corruption is something that harms acceptable values like efficiency, equity, honesty and transparency (Richards, Nwanna,
& Nwankwo, 2003). How else might one look at things? After all, it appears that it is hard for anyone to be fair and honest when there is
widespread corruption in their midst. It seems that if everyone has their hand out, being honest only makes one less lucrative. In other words, there are few incentives to be
honest. When all is said and done, the corruption of course undermines positive public policies and social welfare (Richards, Nwanna, & Nwankwo, 2003). Authors say that
if any effective reform is to be initiated, such as in the form of debt relief, it must be done in such a way so that corruption is tackled first
(Richards, Nwanna, & Nwankwo, 2003). In other words, until the corruption issue is addressed, other issues cannot be adequately repaired. If the forces that spawn corruption are the
same ones that address economic concerns, then the financial problems are simply not going to be easily resolved. Corruption must stop so the flow of money can prevail. In sub-Saharan
...