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‘Goats eat where they are tied up’: illicit and habitual corruption in Mozambique

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
‘Goats eat where they are tied up’: illicit and habitual corruption in Mozambique
Abstract
The article shows that corruption is structural and omnipresent in Mozambican society, effectively legitimising corrupt practices at all levels. Using an anthropological approach, it argues that smallscale corruption has the most immediate effects for the urban and rural poor and is so common that it has become an integrated part of daily life, or ‘habitual’. While most of the poor relate to corruption through tacit acceptance and acts of compliance, its practical implications are most severe for the very poorest, who cannot afford to take part in corrupt exchanges and are excluded from vital social relationships and social services. A few case studies included re: Northern Moz.
Publication
Review of African Political Economy
Volume
45
Issue
158
Pages
541-557
Date
2018-10-02
Journal Abbr
Review of African Political Economy
Language
en
ISSN
0305-6244, 1740-1720
Short Title
‘Goats eat where they are tied up’
Accessed
09/03/2021, 12:34
Library Catalogue
DOI.org (Crossref)
Citation
Tvedten, I., & Picardo, R. (2018). ‘Goats eat where they are tied up’: illicit and habitual corruption in Mozambique. Review of African Political Economy, 45(158), 541–557. https://doi.org/10.1080/03056244.2018.1546686