When Impunity Fights Back: International Anti-Corruption Commissions, Elite Manipulation, and Democratic Backsliding in Central America
A live-streamed video of this event will appear here at the appointed time.
Rachel Schwartz
Assistant Professor of International and Area Studies, University of Oklahoma
Kellogg Institute Visiting Fellow
Amid increasing global concern with corruption, policymakers and civil society organizations have urged the adoption of international anti-corruption commissions (IACCs) to assist in strengthening the rule of law where politicians lack the will and capacity to crack down on corruption themselves. Under what conditions are IACCs granted the autonomy to investigate and prosecute corruption, and when do domestic elites succeed in constraining their authority and capacity? Drawing on comparative analysis of IACCs in Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador, this lecture will unpack the domestic and transnational determinants of IACC design, offering policy insights on the possibilities and limits of international support for strengthening the rule of law in fragile contexts.
Rachel Schwartz
Rachel A. Schwartz is assistant professor of international and area studies at the University of Oklahoma. Her research examines the legacies of armed conflict, corruption, statebuilding, and peacebuilding, with a regional focus on Central America...
Read More