Anomic Dependence and Corruptive Contagion. Regulatory Hypercomplexity and Social Fragmentation in the Mid-Global Era
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.13136/isr.v12i2.566Keywords:
insecurity, anomie, distrustAbstract
Corruption is normally perceived as a system of power that overlaps the state-system. The average citizen seems subjugated to its workings and refrains from fighting against it. The reasons of such an attitude could be subjected to different explanations; there is no doubt that, generally, the social actors consider the state apparatus and its institutions responsible for their lack of action in the face of a widespread practice of corruption, within society. Another relevant aspect is that, due to the transversal nature of corruption, all its proceedings seem to swallow the root of the practice, namely the first corrupted act. As consequence of that, corruption, as a phenomenon, seems to operate as a spiderweb, from which it becomes difficult to untangle.Downloads
Published
16.05.2022
How to Cite
Rufino, A. (2022). Anomic Dependence and Corruptive Contagion. Regulatory Hypercomplexity and Social Fragmentation in the Mid-Global Era. Italian Sociological Review, 12(2), 589. https://doi.org/10.13136/isr.v12i2.566
Issue
Section
Discussions
License
(APC) Article and submissions processing charges
ISR does not ask for articles and submissions processing charges APC
Authors who publish in this journal agree to the following points:
- Authors retain the rights to their work and give to the journal the right of first publication of the work, simultaneously licensed under a Creative Commons License. This attribution allows others to share the work, indicating the authorship and initial publication in this journal.
- The authors may enter into other agreements with non-exclusive license to distribute the published version of the work (eg. deposit it in an institutional archive or publish it in a monograph), provided to indicate that the document was first published in this journal.
- Authors can distribute their work online (eg. on their website) only after the article is published (See The Effect of Open Access).