Finanțele partidelor din România: între dependența de stat și delapidarea lui
Journal Title: Sfera Politicii - Year 2017, Vol 25, Issue 3
Abstract
The article aims to analyze the financial behavior of political parties in Romania and the revenues collected in recent years, on the basis of available official data, as well as the practices of embezzling public money and using state resources for electoral purposes, by referring to several corruption scandals related to their funding. It suggests that, as laws became clearer and more restrictive, the methods of those engaged in corrupt practices seem to be refined as well and that a coherent legal framework along with the firm punishment of those guilty of violating laws could lessen the scourge of corruption.
Authors and Affiliations
Cristina Matiuța
The Origins of Racism in Romania. A History of Ideas
In the present study the author sketches the route of the nationalist-xenophobic discourse which characterized the Romanian society during the first half on the 19th century (1825-1880). The first hypothesis is that the...
Europeni în curs de dezvoltare. Trei runde de alegeri europarlamentare în România
Since the 2007 integration of Romania in the European Union, three elections took place, in order to select the representatives of this country in the European Parliament. The current article has two main objectives: to...
Social Policy and the Corporatist Design: A Romanian Experience of Reluctant Intermingling
The article approaches the competing corporatist discourses in pre-communist Romania from the standpoint of their relation with the process of the development of professional associations and professional chambers, itsel...
Puterea mass media în societatea civilă germană
Mass media is playing a significant role in influencing people’s mind and determining the vote’s preference of each single individual. Nowadays, mass media has become an essential part in setting up the public’s agenda....
Some notes on the concealment of the classical philosopher
Review of: Paul Johnson, Socrates: A man for our times