Corruption — the private appropriation of public trust for personal gain — is among the most universally condemned practices and among the most universally practiced, which suggests that moral condemnation alone is an insufficient deterrent. What works, where it works, tends to be structural: transparency requirements, independent oversight, whistleblower protections, and cultures of institutional accountability strong enough to impose genuine costs on violation. The examined political life asks not only whether elected officials are corrupt but what systems have been built to make corruption difficult — and who benefits from the systems that make it easy.
Each step builds on the last.