Title: Research Project
1Research Project CRIME AND CULTURE THE EUROPEAN
COMISSION 6TH FRAMEWORK PROGRAMME
CRIME AS CULTURE CROATIA 2006 SCIENTIFIC REPORT
THE FIRST PHASE Bucharest, 34 November 2006
Štulhofer, A. Kufrin, K. Caldarovic,
O.Maršic, T. Gregurovic, M. Odak, I. M.
Detelic
2INTRODUCTION ANTICORRUPTION MEASURES
PERCEPTION OF CORRUPTION IN CROATIA AN OVERVIEW
3- A BRIEF HISTORY
- major social, political and economic
transformations during the past 16 years,
affected by the - cultural legacy of state socialism
- disruptions and costs caused by the 19911995 war
- slow and party controlled process of
institutional reforms, especially in respect to
privatization - authoritarian and clientelist regime of the late
president Tudjman - led to systematic irregularities within economic
subsystem and to a number of anomalies in public
services - result widespread perception that corruption is
ubiquitous
4- 20002006 growing political stability,
strengthening of democratic institutions,
improving standard of living - but the public perception of corruption increased
- World Values Survey CroatiaSouth East European
Social Survey Project - "most" of public servants are corrupt
- 1995 66 2003 7
5- Transparency International Croatia surveys
- corruption in Croatia is "extremely
widespread" - 2003 48 2005 7
- corruption is "somewhat less present than three
years ago" - 2003 17 2005 7
- corruption is "a lot more present than before"
- 2003 12 2005 7
6- Global Corruption Barometer
- "the level of corruption will increase over the
next 3 years - 2004 13
- 2005 17
7- in contrast to the surveys, crime statistics
suggest a decrease in corrupt activities - 2001 646 corruption related crimes were
officially recorded - 2002 430 recorded cases
- 2003 329 recorded cases
- 2004 266 recorded cases
- 2005 442 recorded cases
8- personal experience of corruption
- 1996 (Social Capital in Croatia) 28
experienced corruption in health system - 2004 (GCB) 9 of households with direct
experience of corruption - lowlevel corruption and its cultural
acceptability - "corruption could sometimes be justified"
- 1995 (WWS Croatia) 40
- 1999 (EVS Croatia) 25
9- due to differences in question format and
operationalization used in various surveys, it is
hard to establish trends in public perception of
corruption reliably - although Croatias TI Index rank is rather low
and has been worsening since 2001 (3.5 in 2004,
ranked 57th on the list of 145 countries),no
systematic research on corruption exists in
Croatia, side from the Transparency International
GCB annual surveys started a few years ago
10- State response to corruption
- unsufficient, although a progress has been made
(primarily in the legislative area) - main deficiencies
- low level of administrative capacity for
fighting corruption - missing legislation on the financing of
political parties - practical failure of USKOK
- monitoring problems
- insufficient transparency, oversight and
accountability of the state - lack of coordination between the authorities
responsible for anticorruption activities - lack of training in financial investigation
- insufficient training and education for civil
servants and other administrative employees - negligible number of sanctioned corruption cases
11- CURRENT SITUATION
- March 2006 the government launched the new
National AntiCorruption Program (first National
AntiCorruption Program was adopted in 2002) - the event was carefully staged to accentuate its
importance and to send a clear and loud message
to the EU - the action plans envisioned by the new strategy
were promptly developed by the assigned
Ministries - the central anticorruption office (USKOK) was
finally approved for new job openings, and has
expanded its operations (several highly
publicized cases of corruption were processed by
USKOK recently) - the new law on the financing political parties is
expected to be passed by the Parliament in 2006
12DATA GENERATION
13- RESEARCH MATERIALS
- collected mostly during MarchMay 2006 period
- materials from all six target groups were
collected - problem police and economy target groups (only a
few documents were collected) - project database contain a wide range of
documents, including newspaper articles, the
parliamentary and a municipal assembly
proceedings, strategic analyses, annual reports
of various state offices, the text of the new
National AntiCorruption Program, public speeches
made by the PM, Minister of Justice and the
leader of the largest union in the country, NGO
publications and reports, etc - a significant portion of relevant documents were
made available only after direct (personal)
contacts were established with institutions in
question
14- CASE STUDIES
- two cases studies have been selected from a
larger pool of potential cases that came up
through interviews with several local experts - CASE A (highlevel corruption)
- financing issues related to the last
presidential campaign - CASE B (lowlevel corruption)
- corruption in homes for the elderly in the city
of Zagreb
15- CASE A
- presidential elections in January 2005
- 13 candidates
- main target of the analysis financial aspect of
the campaign - alleged irregularities were reported by the media
and a NGO - the scandal unrealistically small advertising
budget reported by the ruling party candidate
(just the cost of TV ads seemed larger than the
sum officially reported by the candidates office)
16main focuses of the analysis a. the presentation
of the case by the media and by civil society b.
the earlier process of adopting the Bill on the
Financing of Presidential Elections in the
Parliament in 2004
17- CASE B
- admittance in homes for the elderly is free of
charge and it is based on waiting lists - the case a client of a HE contacted a NGO (PSD)
and reported number of irregularities - NGO investigated the case and notified the local
government - PSD popular newspaper campaign "Stop
corruption" further indications of criminal
activities in the city HE's
18- an inspection of the Ministry of Health, Work and
Social Care reported irregularities in the Centre - Municipal State Attorney's Office to open the
case against the manager of HECentre - court ruling not guilty ("in spite of the fact
that illegal activities were committed, who was
responsible for them could not be established
beyond the reasonable doubt") - the verdict was later annulled and the case
transferred to the County court where it is still
in procedure - USKOK started investigating several HEs in
Zagreb the investigation is still ongoing
19- DATA COLLECTION
- the materials relevant for the CASE A covered
four target groups politics, the legal system,
the media and civil society - no case related documents for the two other
target groups (the police and economy) were found - the documents collected for the case study A were
dated from April 2004 to July 2005 - the same four target groups were documented in
the analysis of the CASE B - some of the documents regarding the legal system
were unavailable (related court case is still in
procedure) and no case relevant materials could
be found for the police and economy - the documents related to the study B covered the
20032005 period - for the missing target groups, general material
on corruption was used instead
20METHODS
21- PREPARATION FOR THE RESEARCH
- March 2006 two training workshops
- 1st GT outline examples of research
- 2nd working with ATLAS.ti
- March, April, and May 2006 several project team
meetings have been organized to discuss - selection of materials to be coded
- problems regarding (un)availability of the
relevant materials - doubts regarding coding procedure
- problems with ATLAS.ti software
22- CODING
- on the project consortium meeting in Istanbul,
project teams have been instructed to "stick to
the text" and to apply the codes that respect the
text as much as possible - initial coding (research assistants)
- in-vivo or open codes were used
- had to figure out "What does the text
say?"(not "What does it really mean?") - no more than two levels of codes (in GT
terminology codes and categories), both
respecting the manifest level of text
23- special attention was devoted to
- possible (even quite fragmentary) definitions
of corruption - elements of the corruption perception patterns
- what are the causes of corruption
- is corruption considered to be a significant
social problem in Croatian society and why - who are the victims
- who is perceived as corrupt
- how to fight corruption
- who should do what
- (no strict codes have been imposed)
24- to improve the reliability of coding
- two research assistants coded each document
independently - codes were compared, difference discussed and
codes finally applied to the document were set by
consensus - dilemmas and disagreements were resolved on
project meetings or through consultations with
senior researchers - senior researchers revision of codes and
additional coding with eventual application of
higher level codes - on the basis of final codes applied, several
distinct models of understanding corruption were
built
25RESULTS PERCEPTIONS OF CORRUPTION
26- (A) TARGET GROUP POLITICS
- Case A
- the emphasis was on the process of adopting the
law on the financing of electoral advertising in
presidential elections - the analysis was concentrated on two key primary
documents both dated before the Bill was finally
passed - a. an open letter from the President
- b. the transcript of the parliamentary debate
concerning the above mentioned law
27- Case B
- two primary documents were used
- a. the official letter by the City Office for
Health etc. - b. the document from the Ministry of Health
reporting on the results of the inspection
28- Summary analysis
- the pattern of governmental position could be
revisited in the speech given by the Prime
Minister, on the occasion of launching the new
National Anticorruption Program - four major issues were emphasized
- 1. when dealing with the state, citizens should
not feel helpless anymore - 2. we are fighting corruption because of our
internal needs and not because of external
pressures (the EU conditionality) - 3. the main characteristic of the new strategy is
its participative and integrative approach - 4. corruption is universal it is not
specifically the Croatian problem
29- the prevailing perception of corruption in the
target group politics remains unclear - 1. on local levels (the case study B) corruption
is perceived as a nuisance - 2. among the highest-ranking politicians it is
primarily tactical, i.e. oriented towards
maintenance of power and credibility building
30- (B) TARGET GROUP LEGAL SYSTEM
- Case A
- analysis of the case study concerning the
financing of the presidential campaign was based
on three public statements issued by the State
Electoral Committee - they clearly pointed out that the electoral
committee feels powerless and with no authority
in solving problems - Case B
- the document analysed the Annual 2004 Report of
the Office for Combating Corruption and Organized
Crime - The court case left many questions opened...
31- Summary analysis
- negative effects of the widespread public
perception of corruption within legal system - substantial delays in court ruling - fertile
ground for corruption - the position of the legal system seems complex
and insufficiently clear - parts of the legal system systematically
underestimate the presence of corruption within
the system
32- (C) TARGET GROUP POLICE
- a single document from the Ministry of Interior
an analysis of institutional capacity and an
assessment of future needs and goals, as
requested by the government during the process of
preparing the new National Anti-Corruption
Program (adopted in 2006) - the mentioning of internal corruption was limited
to the low-level type, associated with a
relatively small number of traffic and border
police officers
33focused on the prevention of
corruption trust building between citizens and
the police criminalization of bribe
offering focus on organizational
improvements pragmatic approach - corruption is
perceived as serious and potentially explosive
societal problem
34- (D) TARGET GROUP MEDIA
- Case A
- three primary documents covering financing of the
presidential campaign. - a. "political scandal" involving the state TV
- b. an article attempted to identify the motives
beneath the President plea for the new law - c. a document gave voice to the criticism of the
new Bill on the Financing of Presidential
Election - Case B
- the case of Zagreb HEs the perception of
corruption in media reports was primarily latent
the journalists refrained from explicit
accusations or condemnation
35- Summary analysis
- the media expressed a highly alert and critical
stance towards corruption - the media shared common assumptions about
corruption and its impact with the NGO
36- (E) TARGET GROUP CIVIL SOCIETY
- Case A
- the reports of two NGOs, GONG and Transparency
International Croatia (TIC) were analysed - the reports represent reactions to the Bill on
the financing of Presidential Elections - Case B
- the primary documents - three press releases and
two annual reports issued by the Partnership for
Social Development (PSD) - the scandal in HE has highlighted corrupt
networks of power that effectively victimize
ordinary citizens
37- Summary analysis
- civil society representatives displayed a highly
critical approach - the criticism is based on the principle of the
centrality of human rights, openly dealt with
political corruption - the prevailing understanding of corruption -
anchored in human rights paradigm - almost automatic suspicion toward those in power
38- (F) TARGET GROUP ECONOMY
- three documents corruption on the part of the
economically relevant institutions, the Croatian
Employers Association (CEA) and the Independent
Croatian Unions (ICU). - insight into attitudes towards and perceptions of
corruption. - the CEA believes that the corruption is a
systemic phenomenon, - the most troublesome aspects cultural tradition
that supports it
39- the ICU material - only general comments about
corruption - the legal system and economy target groups share
similar perceptions of corruption - anti-corruption steps taken so far were
recognized as important, but insufficient
40CONCLUSIONS TAXONOMIC SUMMARY OF THE
FINDINGS GROUP-SPECIFIC CONCEPTUALISATIONS AND
PERCEPTIONS OF CORRUPTION IN CROATIA
41- THE CASE STUDIES
- CASE STUDY A
- two wider group coalitions emerge, each with
specific normative belief system concerning the
public character of the financial issues of the
2005 presidential elections - 1st the government, the parliamentary majority
and the majority of members of the managing board
of the Croatian public TV. Major aspect less
transparent law seemed not to be a problem - 2nd the political opposition, expert groups,
the civil society and the State Electoral
Committee, the body responsible for the legality
of election process - major aspect a consensus regarding the basic
measures that need to be enacted to clear and
enforce the rules of political financing
42- two opposing perceptions or models of corruption
in this case study - a. the PR model (impression management)
- taking steps that will result in a positive
public opinion impact - efficient message about political commitment to
combating corruption - b. the Expert model (professional responsibility)
- professional expertise
- rich understanding of corruption
- technically sophisticated solutions to the
problem - sometimes insufficiently sensitive to
(political) context and the existing
institutional capacity
43- CASE STUDY B
- two models of understanding of corruption
- a. the Nuisance model
- avoidance
- corruption as a little more than a nuisance
- minimize problems and costs associated with
corruption - b. the Human Rights model
- characteristic of civil society
- focuses primarily on individual costs and
personal responsibility - the importance of fundamental role of civic
sector
44- PERCEPTIONS OF CORRUPTION IN CROATIA
- several models can be described in regard to four
main dimensions - (1) the Public Relations model
- main elements
- simplified, populist and/or one-dimensional
definition(s) of corruption - corruption - primarily damaging for public
image of the institution/actors in question - measures for fighting corruption are evaluated
according to the PR efficiency criteria - focuses mostly on low-level corruption
45- (2) the Expert model
- main elements
- complex and comprehensive definition(s) of
corruption - corruption is damaging socio-cultural fabric of
society and is economically wasteful - measures for fighting corruption are based on
best international practice - focuses on high-level or political corruption
46- (3) the Nuisance model
- main elements
- no clear definition of corruption
- corruption is a minor and omnipresent issue
that has been overblown - measures for fighting corruption should be ad
hoc and situation-specific - the focus is usually missing when unavoidable,
it is mostly on low-level corruption
47- (4) the Human Rights model
- main elements
- a comprehensive definition emphasizing human
rights and individual responsibility - corruption is moral, socio-cultural and
economic evil - measures for fighting corruption should be
extremely rigorous, transparent and inclusive - focuses on both low-level and high-level
corruption
48Two additional models could be also suggested by
the documents unrelated to our case studies
- (5) the Pragmatic model
- main elements
- comprehensive definition linked to legal
description - corruption is a major social problem
- revolves around the imperative of curbing
corruption - biased towards activities that deal almost
exclusively with manageable corruption - the strategy is simple concentrate on what is
manageable and avoid what is not - measures for fighting corruption need to be
systematic, coordinated, and assisted by
international aid
49- (6) the Ignoring model
- main elements
- overlooking the phenomenon of corruption
- usually ad hoc and declaratory definition(s)
- becomes problematic when it severely impedes
governance - measures for fighting corruption are largely
absent - corruption is marginalized and underestimated
- a combination of the extreme version of the P
model ("corruption is unmanageable") and the N
model ("corruption is but a minor issue")
50- precautions
- models need to be seen primarily as Weberian
ideal types - in reality, models can be found only in
fragments - it would be mistaken to assume that each target
group could be neatly represented by a single
model - most target groups were characterized by
several different models - by a number of elements taken from different
models of corruption
51- linkages between the models and target groups
- the PR model
- target group politics
- within the government and the ruling party
- partially in the legal system target group
- the P model
- politics, police, partially civil society
- the N model
- city government and administration (target
group politics)
52 the I model target group economy partially
also with the legal system the E model in a
number of target groups - civil society (the case
A), the media (the case A), politics (the
parliamentary opposition) and partially economy,
the legal system (the new national
anti-corruption strategy) and the police the HR
model with civil society (the case B), politics
(Ombudsmans report) and the media (the case B)
target groups
53- conclusions are tentative at best
- in some cases documents collected proved
insufficient for producing conclusions - in some other instances the character of
documents analysed were unsuitable or too
ambivalent for reaching any definite conclusion - the linkages between the (ideal-typical) models
and the six target groups need to be taken with
great caution - in the next project phase (2007), existing data
will be complemented by additional and more
detailed information collected through interviews
with key informants from all six-target groups - the additional data should clarify the existence
and attribution of the proposed models of
understanding corruption