Mariano Mosquera: Preventing Corruption
Mariano Mosquera, is an Edmond J. Safra Network Fellow at Harvard University and Postdoctoral Fellow of the National University of Cordoba. He is a professor of Ethics and Access to Public Information of the National University of Córdoba and professor of Public Policy at the Catholic University of Cordoba.
Key Points
- Different places in the world have different concepts of corruption.
- A lot of corruption is created by poorly conceived or implemented laws.
- Some actions may be legal but should be still be considered institutional corruption.
- Just trying to catch corrupt individuals doesn’t work; we need to change the rules that incentivize or allow corruption.
- If you can anticipate corruption you can help prevent it.
- Rather than immediately reporting corruption, sometimes it’s better to simply steer the conversation another way.
Resources Mentioned
- Mariano Mosquera’s website
- Harvard articles by Mariano Mosquera
Related Episodes
- How We Do Things Around Here To Get Results, with Kent Rhodes (episode 144)
- Eight Ways To Use Power For Good (episode 154)
- Use Power for Good and Not Evil, with Dacher Keltner (episode 254)
Discover More
Activate your free membership for full access to the entire library of interviews since 2011, searchable by topic.