The role of civil society organisations in initiating an anti-corruption policy in Serbia

The paper illuminates how civil society organisations in Serbia, in the aftermath of the political changes initiated on 5 October 2000, played the essential role in articulating corruption as a vital public issue, raising awareness of the public, and putting pressure on the then governments to inclu...

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Main Authors: Korać Srđan T., Bulatović Aleksandra
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Institute for Political Studies, Belgrade 2023-01-01
Series:Srpska Politička Misao
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Online Access:https://scindeks-clanci.ceon.rs/data/pdf/0354-5989/2023/0354-59892301101K.pdf
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author Korać Srđan T.
Bulatović Aleksandra
author_facet Korać Srđan T.
Bulatović Aleksandra
author_sort Korać Srđan T.
collection DOAJ
description The paper illuminates how civil society organisations in Serbia, in the aftermath of the political changes initiated on 5 October 2000, played the essential role in articulating corruption as a vital public issue, raising awareness of the public, and putting pressure on the then governments to include this issue in the political agenda. Our analysis focuses on two planes of civil society organisations activities: 1) research efforts aimed at properly understanding the phenomenology of corruption as the first step towards sound conceptualisation of various anti-corruption measures, and 2) educational initiatives aimed at transferring knowledge and good practice in anti-corruption methodology and policies from post-industrial societies and other post-Communist countries. The timeframe of our analysis embraces the period from 5 October 2000 to December 2005, which we see as the initial phase of engaging civil society organisations in anti-corruption policy in Serbia, before the National Anti-Corruption Strategy was adopted. After the changes in October 2000, civil society organizations in Serbia have acted as a significant factor in raising public awareness of corruption as well as in building anti-corruption institutional and normative infrastructure. From campaigns that targeted all stakeholders (citizens, media, business sector, decision makers) aiming at changing their priorities and interests, to participating in the set-up of public policies in the field of rule of law and monitoring the implementation of anti-corruption laws and strategic commitment, civil society organisations that operated within very wide range of activities, successfully influenced both the institutions and the general public. Despite wide range of activities and modest resources, civil society organisations had an impact on actions of the government, public institutions, and the media. The fight against corruption became one of the central issues in the then Serbia's political debate. Yet the anti-corruption achievements of Serbian civil society organisations in the period 2000-2005, were limited due to a chronic deficit of political, professional, and moral responsibility of all social actors, resulting in "systemic error" of public policies strategic design aimed at combating corruption - the lack of a participatory political culture. The lack of a participatory political culture in citizen action has limited efficiency in achieving development policy goals, and in implementation and monitoring of public policies relevant to curbing corruption. Belief has been established, that citizens do not ask questions and therefore do not have the power to exercise policy influence nor to shape the environment in which they live. As the concept of political community is a special construct based on democracy and human rights, non-inclusiveness as previously outlined here destructively affected society by making deeper asymmetries of all kinds due to disintegrating influence that prevents the final community constitution through democratic institutions.
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spelling doaj-art-866bb79a356d4a5e81705003502924d62025-01-14T11:09:06ZdeuInstitute for Political Studies, BelgradeSrpska Politička Misao0354-59892023-01-0179110112310.5937/spm79-428000354-59892301101KThe role of civil society organisations in initiating an anti-corruption policy in SerbiaKorać Srđan T.0https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0722-6419Bulatović Aleksandra1https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4273-8583Institut za političke studije, Beograd, SerbiaInstitut za filozofiju i društvenu teoriju, Beograd, SerbiaThe paper illuminates how civil society organisations in Serbia, in the aftermath of the political changes initiated on 5 October 2000, played the essential role in articulating corruption as a vital public issue, raising awareness of the public, and putting pressure on the then governments to include this issue in the political agenda. Our analysis focuses on two planes of civil society organisations activities: 1) research efforts aimed at properly understanding the phenomenology of corruption as the first step towards sound conceptualisation of various anti-corruption measures, and 2) educational initiatives aimed at transferring knowledge and good practice in anti-corruption methodology and policies from post-industrial societies and other post-Communist countries. The timeframe of our analysis embraces the period from 5 October 2000 to December 2005, which we see as the initial phase of engaging civil society organisations in anti-corruption policy in Serbia, before the National Anti-Corruption Strategy was adopted. After the changes in October 2000, civil society organizations in Serbia have acted as a significant factor in raising public awareness of corruption as well as in building anti-corruption institutional and normative infrastructure. From campaigns that targeted all stakeholders (citizens, media, business sector, decision makers) aiming at changing their priorities and interests, to participating in the set-up of public policies in the field of rule of law and monitoring the implementation of anti-corruption laws and strategic commitment, civil society organisations that operated within very wide range of activities, successfully influenced both the institutions and the general public. Despite wide range of activities and modest resources, civil society organisations had an impact on actions of the government, public institutions, and the media. The fight against corruption became one of the central issues in the then Serbia's political debate. Yet the anti-corruption achievements of Serbian civil society organisations in the period 2000-2005, were limited due to a chronic deficit of political, professional, and moral responsibility of all social actors, resulting in "systemic error" of public policies strategic design aimed at combating corruption - the lack of a participatory political culture. The lack of a participatory political culture in citizen action has limited efficiency in achieving development policy goals, and in implementation and monitoring of public policies relevant to curbing corruption. Belief has been established, that citizens do not ask questions and therefore do not have the power to exercise policy influence nor to shape the environment in which they live. As the concept of political community is a special construct based on democracy and human rights, non-inclusiveness as previously outlined here destructively affected society by making deeper asymmetries of all kinds due to disintegrating influence that prevents the final community constitution through democratic institutions.https://scindeks-clanci.ceon.rs/data/pdf/0354-5989/2023/0354-59892301101K.pdfcivil society organisationscivil societynon-governmental sectorcorruptionanti-corruption policytransitiondemocracy
spellingShingle Korać Srđan T.
Bulatović Aleksandra
The role of civil society organisations in initiating an anti-corruption policy in Serbia
Srpska Politička Misao
civil society organisations
civil society
non-governmental sector
corruption
anti-corruption policy
transition
democracy
title The role of civil society organisations in initiating an anti-corruption policy in Serbia
title_full The role of civil society organisations in initiating an anti-corruption policy in Serbia
title_fullStr The role of civil society organisations in initiating an anti-corruption policy in Serbia
title_full_unstemmed The role of civil society organisations in initiating an anti-corruption policy in Serbia
title_short The role of civil society organisations in initiating an anti-corruption policy in Serbia
title_sort role of civil society organisations in initiating an anti corruption policy in serbia
topic civil society organisations
civil society
non-governmental sector
corruption
anti-corruption policy
transition
democracy
url https://scindeks-clanci.ceon.rs/data/pdf/0354-5989/2023/0354-59892301101K.pdf
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