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Beskrivelse
Corruption: Anthropological Perspectives is a profound interpretation of global corruption from the perspective of anthropology, which is made by 13 anthropologists in the world for several years, who have made field visits to the United States, Russia, the European Union, Bolivia and other countries, and have published materials. From discussing the causes of corruption to analyzing corruption in combination with economic and social background, interpreting global anti-corruption institutions, and analyzing the spread and development of corruption. The authors point out that corruption is the global common fault of human society. No country in the world can be free from corruption. Corruption is a war without gunpowder between human nature, power and morality. At present, corruption has seriously affected every aspect of every stratum in every country. The author interprets corruption from an anthropological rather than a political point of view to point out that although corruption comes from human nature, culture and system can control the degree and harmfulness of corruption. In short, anti-corruption has become a global event, with a long way to go.