From Candidate to Criminal: The Contingencies of Corruption in Elected Public Office

Mark Kane Goldstein, H. S. Pennypacker

Abstract


Political corruption is identified as the behavioral consequence of novel contingencies of reinforcement introduced immediately after a candidate for public office is victorious and assumes the powers of incumbency. An analysis of the contingencies surrounding the transition from candidate to criminal is presented and strategies for overcoming the corrosive effects of postelection reinforces are offered.

Full Text:

PDF


DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.5210%2Fbsi.v8i1.317



Published by the University of Illinois at Chicago Library

And Behaviorists for Social Responsibility