BETWEEN IMPUNITY & IMPERIALISM: THE REGULATION OF TRANSNATIONAL BRIBERY
by Kevin E. Davis
Excellent copy of this significant offering by Oxford Press, essentially new. Hardcover with jacket, xii + 332 pages. Ships promptly & securely.
When people pay bribes to foreign public officials, how should the
law respond? This question has been debated ever since the enactment of
the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act of 1977, and some of the key
arguments can be traced back to Cicero in the last years of the Roman
Republic and Edmund Burke in late eighteenth-century England. In recent
years, the U.S. and other members of the OECD have joined forces to make
anti-bribery law one of the most prominent sources of liability for
firms and individuals who operate across borders. The modern regime is
premised on the idea that transnational bribery is a serious problem
which invariably merits a vigorous legal response. The shape of that
response can be summed up in the phrase "every little bit helps," which
in practice means that: prohibitions on bribery should capture a broad
range of conduct; enforcement should target as broad a range of actors
as possible; sanctions should be as stiff as possible; and as many
agencies as possible should be involved in the enforcement process.
An
important challenge to the OECD paradigm, labelled here the
"anti-imperialist critique," accepts that transnational bribery is a
serious problem but questions the conventional responses. This book uses
a series of high-profile cases to illustrate key elements of
transnational bribery law in action, and analyzes the law through the
lenses of both the OECD paradigm and the anti-imperialist critique. It
ultimately defends a distinctively inclusive and experimentalist
approach to transnational bribery law.