Health Status and Political Corruption: a Comparative Study

Steven A. Peterson
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Abstract

There is a relatively small but important research oeuvre in the biological study of comparative and international politics. This essay is situated within that literature. One significant issue in comparative politics is corruption—its causes, its consequences, and remediation. This study focuses on the first point with a focus on a biosocial variable that might be at work. Prior research has suggested that health status of a nation affects extent of democratization, electoral integrity, and fragility of states. In no case is health status the dominant predictor. Given its relationship with those three aspects of a polity, this paper examines the effect of health status on corruption across states. Given prior results, there is good reason to hypothesize that as health status increases, states are less apt to have high rates of corruption. The base for this analysis comprises data on over 150 nations. Among the variables as part of that data set are health status and corruption. Results are reported and discussion centers on the meaning of the data and what the implications might be.
健康状况与政治腐败的比较研究
在比较政治和国际政治的生物学研究中,有一个相对较小但重要的研究成果。这篇文章属于那种文学。比较政治学中的一个重要问题是腐败——它的起因、后果和补救措施。这项研究的重点是第一点,重点是可能在起作用的生物社会变量。先前的研究表明,一个国家的健康状况会影响其民主化程度、选举的完整性和国家的脆弱性。在任何情况下,健康状况都不是主要的预测因素。鉴于其与政体的这三个方面的关系,本文考察了健康状况对各州腐败的影响。鉴于先前的结果,有充分的理由假设,随着健康状况的提高,国家不太可能出现高腐败率。这项分析的基础包括150多个国家的数据。作为该数据集一部分的变量包括健康状态和损坏情况。结果报告和讨论集中在数据的意义和可能的含义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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