Thinking about Bribery: Neuroscience, Moral Cognition and the Psychology of Bribery

Thinking about Bribery: Neuroscience, Moral Cognition and the Psychology of Bribery
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Country
United Kingdom
Published
7 September 2017
Pages
284
ISBN
9781107132214

Thinking about Bribery: Neuroscience, Moral Cognition and the Psychology of Bribery

Bribery is perhaps the most visible and most frequently studied form of corruption. Very little research, however, examines the individual decision to offer or accept a bribe, or how understanding that decision can help to effectively control bribery. This book brings together research by scholars from a variety of disciplines studying the mind and morality, who use their research to explain how and why decisions regarding participation in bribery are made. It first examines bribery from the perspective of brain structure, then approaches the decision to engage in bribery from a cognitive perspective. It examines the psychological costs imposed on a person who engages in bribery, and studies societal and organizational norms and their impact on bribery. This is an ideal read for scholars and other interested persons studying business ethics, bribery and corruption, corruption control, and the applications of neuroscience in a business environment.

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