Review
“Roper has not only written a highly readable, riveting account of certain emotions at war, but has also contributed something very new to the history of warfare generally. There is simply nothing else like this book currently in the field. It will serve as a model upon which further research is conducted.” -- Professor Joanna Bourke, Birkbeck College
From the Inside Flap
What can be done against corruption? If we trust most assessments, the global anti-corruption movement has so far not managed to markedly reduce the level of corruption, especially in the more problematic countries. This book examines the actual workings of transnational anti-corruption advocacy on the ground. In the 21st century, transnational advocacy has become ever more complex: all actors are highly professionalised and can increasingly rely on growing structures for the exchange of information, resources, and services. Using the case study of contemporary Russia and a multi-sited ethnographic approach (including three Russian cities), the book reassesses what this means for advocacy practices such as information politics, technical assistance, or combined pressure from above and below. It thoroughly maps the entanglement between international, national and local levels. Amongst others, this study reveals a range of obstacles posed to constructively involving civil society in practice, despite unanimous rhetorical commitment on the part of international actors and governments. Not least, within a highly professionalized and bureaucratized global movement, or regime, the worlds of civil society and governments are often technically kept apart from each other. The book further shows that the effectiveness of transnational advocacy is determined by both strategic action and situational contingencies. Thanks to the latter, even in Russia, a notoriously hard nut to crack for external promoters of good governance, we may thus observe sporadic successes. As such, the book speaks to readers in, at least, three main fields of study: transnational advocacy, the anti-corruption movement, and Eastern Europe, particularly Russia.