On Constructing a Corruption Principle: The Importance of History and Theory in Practice
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Published:2021-05-05
Issue:
Volume:
Page:174387212110017
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ISSN:1743-8721
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Container-title:Law, Culture and the Humanities
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Law, Culture & the Humanities
Author:
Fagelson David1,
Klusmeyer Douglas1
Affiliation:
1. American University, USA
Abstract
Citizens United has stimulated a cottage industry of legal scholarship on corruption. A prominent stream of this literature is self-consciously atheoretical and suggests that the current state of corruption jurisprudence suffers from a misconceived reliance on liberal political theories and a rejection of the public good. We argue that it is impossible to understand specific acts of corruption without a political theory explaining why such actions are wrong. We show that the current jurisprudence relies on a mistaken intellectual history of the public good and a political theory of American constitutionalism that commodifies citizenship and treats political participation as a market good. Pace Teachout, we cannot draw the bright lines many legal scholars desire without a better political theory of the primary goods we want to protect.
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Subject
Law,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Cultural Studies