- Title
- Legal remedies against corruption: lessons from Guatemala
- Creator
- Cordell, Cameron George Thomas
- Subject
- Remedies (Law) -- Guatemala
- Subject
- Remedies (Law) -- South Africa Criminal law -- Guatemala Criminal law -- South Africa Public law -- South Africa Public law -- Guatemala
- Date Issued
- 2019
- Date
- 2019
- Type
- Thesis
- Type
- Masters
- Type
- LLM
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/10948/38013
- Identifier
- vital:34281
- Description
- Corruption is a crime which has affected all levels of government in South Africa. Despite the multi-agency system developed since the advent of democracy, levels of corruption are still on the rise, with greater levels of impunity. It is clear that reform is needed within South Africa’s anti-corruption framework. The state of Guatemala has meanwhile achieved results that have been described as transcendental in the fight against corruption, via a novel anti-corruption commission formed in collaboration with the United Nations, known as the Commission against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG). This dissertation begins with an examination of the content of the crime of corruption via a historical approach – charting the course of corruption and effort to curb it from Ancient Greece, Mesoamerica and Africa, through the various legal systems that have resulted in the modern-day legal frameworks of South Africa and Guatemala. In doing so, a working definition of corruption has been developed – namely the unlawful and unethical enrichment of the self at the expense of the state. This definition aids in clearly defining proven instances of corruption within the public sector in modern South Africa. While corruption as a crime is generally clandestine in nature and difficult to deal with quantitatively, it is clearly demonstrated from the instances of corruption that have been proven that the offence is dealt with ineffectually by the existing policy and legal framework. Examinations of corruption scandals such as the capture of the state by private family corporations, to the collapse of South Africa’s Social Security Agency (SASSA), show that even when proven, corrupt politicians rarely face consequences for their actions. This is due to the lack of clarity in the primary legislation dealing with corruption – the Prevention and Combatting of Corrupt Activity Act (PRECCA), combined with a multi-agency approach wherein the various bodies tasked with combatting corruption are not working cohesively. The solution to this problem is a single commission to integrate the anti-corruption framework, as well as providing a fresh perspective about how to deal with the crime. The CICIG has served this role in Guatemala, resulting in successful investigations and prosecutions of former Presidents, judges and members of the legislature. It has achieved this by supporting and working with the existing anti-corruption bodies, as well as advising government on effective policy reform. It is further staffed by anti-corruption experts who are from the Central and South American region, providing a level of trust and regional knowledge. There is no bar in South African law for the creation of a similar international body. Such a move is necessary to provide a fresh outlook on the fight against corruption in South Africa. An international body, staffed by African anti-corruption experts, would be an effective means to work with the multi-agency system currently in place to aid it in working cohesively, but also to provide African solutions to the scourge of corruption through policy reform.
- Format
- 212 leaves
- Format
- Publisher
- Nelson Mandela University
- Publisher
- Faculty of Law
- Language
- English
- Rights
- Nelson Mandela University
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