sara zekra
2011-11-11, 13:41
اريد تعبيربالغة الانجليزية عن ظاهرة الفساد
mustafa666
2011-11-11, 14:48
j'ai déja fais un à la classe...mais je me rapelle pas tros de se que j'ai écris..en tout les cas il y a une page au livre qui te donne des idées c'est la page 58....tu commence par l'introduction (tu la trouve a la meme page) et tu termine par les raisons
موساوي واضح
2011-11-11, 17:30
اريد تعبيربالغة الانجليزية عن ظاهرة الفساد
 Corruption is a phenomenon of our societies satisfactory prevail at this time, since it destroys the spirit of creativity and ideas of sabotaging societies and calls to action Harm, which DASHES value of ethics, such as: theft - bribery - lying and forgery, and this type of corruption .......-( ) - Known to widen not limited in our current and departments and jobs. 
To combat this degree of damage must first return to the teachings of religion and obedience to God and His Prophet and the establishment of an educated generation knows how serious this damage and awareness of the need to move away from the acquisition of a new methodology in life to replace these negatives other people with the positive aspects and the fight against evil spread by all means.
محب بلاده
2011-11-11, 17:47
Corruption as a cultural phenomenon
   An 18-year old boy, whose mother worked as a  maid, died in somewhat mysterious circumstances. Different hospital  staff demanded bribes totalling Rs 500 to issue the death certificate --  after he had visited the place seven times, and fainted once because he  was too poor to eat.
No one knows why some of us are such  unmitigated swine that we demand money from the poorest of the poor for  even such things like dry firewood for cremation. Without the bribe you  are given wet wood, which weighs more and burns badly. That means you  need even more of it. The bribes are sometimes at a flat rate and  sometimes so many rupees per kilo.
Two economists, Raymond Fisman  from Columbia University and Edward Miguel from Berkeley decided to find  out more about corruption*. What they say may not become the Unified  Theory of Corruption but it nonetheless throws a great deal of light on  how and why people behave so badly. They ask, is it poor enforcement of  the law or is it a cultural thing?
The problem has always been to  separate the two, but Fisman and Miguel have found an ingenious way of  doing it. They studied the parking habits of the thousands of diplomats  in New York because they have diplomatic immunity. It seems between  November 1997 and the end of 2002 in New York City, diplomats had  "accumulated over 150,000 unpaid parking tickets, resulting in  outstanding fines of more than $18 million."
"Diplomatic immunity  means there was essentially zero legal enforcement of diplomatic parking  violations, allowing us to examine the role of cultural norms alone."  What they found is shocking but intuitively probably true.
They  found that "diplomats from high corruption countries have significantly  more parking violations, and these differences persist over time". In  other words, some nationalities  are rascals by origin. They found that the more corrupt a country was,  the more likely its diplomats were to violate parking laws, taking  refuge behind their immunity.
They also found that  diplomats who had a poor view of the US committed "significantly more  parking violations, providing non-laboratory evidence on sentiment in  economic decision-making." The worst parking were Kuwait, Egypt, Chad,  Sudan, Bulgaria, Mozambique, Albania, Angola, Senegal, and (ha! who  else?) Pakistan.
So the main inference: "Taken together, factors  other than legal enforcement appear to be important determinants of  corruption" and "norms related to corruption are apparently deeply  engrained." This is bad news for India where many people believe that we  can get rid of corruption simply by being stricter in the application  of laws.
This finding, however, is very different from what two  other economists**, Rafael Di Tella and Ernesto Schargrodsky, found in  Buenos Aires in respect of prices by hospitals for inputs.
They  say that the prices paid decrease by 15 per cent during the first nine  months of what we in India would call an anti-corruption drive. Then  they again increase but not to the levels prevailing before the  crackdown.
Nit-pickers will disagree with much of what these studies have found. But the basic point, I think, is a valid  one: corruption is very much a cultural phenomenon. The fact that it  exists in all countries is no defence. It does nothing to detract from  this basic cultural feature because it is the degree of corruption that  is important, not just its presence in all countries.
After all, how can you explain the two examples I gave at the outset in terms other than cultural?
*Cultures of Corruption: Evidence From Diplomatic Parking Tickets, NBER Working Paper No. 12312, June 2006