发展中国家的信息技术与政府腐败:来自加纳海关的证据

MIS Q. Pub Date : 2020-10-28 DOI:10.25300/misq/2021/14838
Atta Addo, C. Avgerou
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引用次数: 13

摘要

关于信息技术与发展中国家政府腐败的文献表明,关于反腐效果的实现存在矛盾的证据。到目前为止,还没有理论解释为什么IT的反腐败潜力在一些国家表现出来,而在许多其他国家没有实现。从加纳海关35年来信息系统干预的案例研究中获得证据,我们调查了在发展中国家政府和社会的背景下,IT的反腐败潜力如何以及为什么会被削弱。我们关注的是信息技术介导的街头官员的轻微腐败行为,我们认为这是一种社会嵌入和制度制约的现象。我们发现,在信息系统的实施过程中,信息技术介导的轻微腐败行为的可能性条件被创造出来。政府机构的信息技术配置和组织流程受到更广泛的政府管理系统的约束,并受到政府官员、政治家和企业既得利益的影响。随后,在政府、企业和社会中扩展的关系网络和赞助机构使得利用信息技术进行小规模腐败行为成为可能。因此,我们解释说,信息技术对轻微腐败的影响往往有限,因为本地化信息系统的实施无法改变许多发展中国家持久的新世袭制度和政治中嵌入的政府管理模式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Information Technology and Government Corruption in Developing Countries: Evidence from Ghana Customs
The literature on information technology (IT) and government corruption in developing countries indicates contradictory evidence about the realization of anti-corruption effects. So far, there is no theoretical explanation of why the anti-corruption potential of IT demonstrated in some countries is not realized in many other countries. Drawing evidence from a case study of information systems interventions at Ghana customs over 35 years, we investigate how and why IT’s anti-corruption potential may be curtailed in the context of developing countries’ governments and societies. We focus on IT-mediated petty corruption practices of street-level officers, which we consider to be socially embedded and institutionally conditioned phenomena. We find that conditions of possibility for the IT-mediated petty corruption practices are created during the implementation of information systems. The configuration of IT and organizational processes of a government agency are constrained by the broader government administration system and influenced by the vested interests of government officers, politicians, and businesses. Subsequently, the co-optation of IT for petty corruption practices is enabled by networks of relationships and institutions of patronage that extend across government, business, and society. We thus explain the often limited effects of IT on petty corruption as the inability of localized information systems implementations to change modes of government administration that are embedded in the enduring neopatrimonial institutions and politics of many developing countries.
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