Corruption and legal methods of fighting it : the European Union policy towards the Central and Eastern European countries before and after the accession

The fight against corruption emerged as one of the most significant issues during the 2004 enlargement and gained even more importance with the accession of Romania and Bulgaria in 2007. This thesis examines the European Union (EU) policy against corruption in the context of the accession of the Cen...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Szarek, Patrycja
Published: University of Edinburgh 2008
Subjects:
340
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.662685
id ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-662685
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-6626852018-05-12T03:20:39ZCorruption and legal methods of fighting it : the European Union policy towards the Central and Eastern European countries before and after the accessionSzarek, Patrycja2008The fight against corruption emerged as one of the most significant issues during the 2004 enlargement and gained even more importance with the accession of Romania and Bulgaria in 2007. This thesis examines the European Union (EU) policy against corruption in the context of the accession of the Central and Eastern European countries in 2004. Its prime objective is to illustrate the differences between EU policy towards existing Member States and the candidate countries in this area. The thesis outlines the legal bases and historical development of the EU anti-corruption framework, and goes on to show that the enlargement process has profoundly transformed this policy framework. It analyses how the fight against corruption became one of the EU membership criteria and explains that accession policy forced the EU to create new institutions and mechanisms to address the problem of corruption within the candidate countries. The thesis also argues that the experience gained by the EU in the 2004 accession led to a more robust anti-corruption stance during the accession of Bulgaria and Romania and will have implications for any future enlargements of the EU. However, the thesis further points at the limited nature of the anti-corruption framework that applies to existing Member States and argues that it does not respond to the urgent need to enhance anti-corruption standards within the EU. The thesis suggests that the EU should use the experience gained within the pre-accession process to develop a more coherent framework that would promote higher anti-corruption standards among Member States.340University of Edinburghhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.662685http://hdl.handle.net/1842/29390Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 340
spellingShingle 340
Szarek, Patrycja
Corruption and legal methods of fighting it : the European Union policy towards the Central and Eastern European countries before and after the accession
description The fight against corruption emerged as one of the most significant issues during the 2004 enlargement and gained even more importance with the accession of Romania and Bulgaria in 2007. This thesis examines the European Union (EU) policy against corruption in the context of the accession of the Central and Eastern European countries in 2004. Its prime objective is to illustrate the differences between EU policy towards existing Member States and the candidate countries in this area. The thesis outlines the legal bases and historical development of the EU anti-corruption framework, and goes on to show that the enlargement process has profoundly transformed this policy framework. It analyses how the fight against corruption became one of the EU membership criteria and explains that accession policy forced the EU to create new institutions and mechanisms to address the problem of corruption within the candidate countries. The thesis also argues that the experience gained by the EU in the 2004 accession led to a more robust anti-corruption stance during the accession of Bulgaria and Romania and will have implications for any future enlargements of the EU. However, the thesis further points at the limited nature of the anti-corruption framework that applies to existing Member States and argues that it does not respond to the urgent need to enhance anti-corruption standards within the EU. The thesis suggests that the EU should use the experience gained within the pre-accession process to develop a more coherent framework that would promote higher anti-corruption standards among Member States.
author Szarek, Patrycja
author_facet Szarek, Patrycja
author_sort Szarek, Patrycja
title Corruption and legal methods of fighting it : the European Union policy towards the Central and Eastern European countries before and after the accession
title_short Corruption and legal methods of fighting it : the European Union policy towards the Central and Eastern European countries before and after the accession
title_full Corruption and legal methods of fighting it : the European Union policy towards the Central and Eastern European countries before and after the accession
title_fullStr Corruption and legal methods of fighting it : the European Union policy towards the Central and Eastern European countries before and after the accession
title_full_unstemmed Corruption and legal methods of fighting it : the European Union policy towards the Central and Eastern European countries before and after the accession
title_sort corruption and legal methods of fighting it : the european union policy towards the central and eastern european countries before and after the accession
publisher University of Edinburgh
publishDate 2008
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.662685
work_keys_str_mv AT szarekpatrycja corruptionandlegalmethodsoffightingittheeuropeanunionpolicytowardsthecentralandeasterneuropeancountriesbeforeandaftertheaccession
_version_ 1718636249231654912