Skip to main content
Logo
Policy Brief · 1 Dec 2017

Policy Brief 4: Social norms, mental models and other behavioural drivers of petty corruption – the case of Tanzania

by Claudia Baez Camargo, Saba Kassa · Published by Basel Institute on Governance
Corruption Prevention and Public Governance

This policy brief summarises the main findings and lessons learned from research on corruption, social norms and behaviours in Tanzania. While the findings show that petty corruption is prevalent and results in inequitable public service delivery, they also inform that citizen and public officials’ attitudes and behaviours towards corruption are shifting as a result of changes in the political environment.

The evidence furthermore suggests that the effectiveness of conventional anti-corruption approaches may be enhanced by incorporating behavioural insights about entrenched social norms and collective understandings that are associated with practices of bribery and favouritism.

About this Policy Brief

This publication is part of the Basel Institute on Governance Policy Brief series, ISSN 2624-9669.

It is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0).

Suggested citation: Baez Camargo, Claudia, and Saba Kassa. 2017. “Social norms, mental models and other behavioural drivers of petty corruption – the case of Tanzania.” Policy Brief 4, Basel Institute on Governance.

How to cite

Baez Camargo, C., Stahl, C., Kasa, S. (2017) Social Norms, Mental Models and other Behavioural Drivers of Petty Corruption – the Case of Tanzania. Basel Institute on Governance

Connect with us

Stay up to date with new opportunities to learn, engage and work with the Basel Institute

We use cookies to measure how this site is used. Accept to allow analytics cookies. Essential, cookieless measurement runs regardless. More info