Fighting Corruption in the Italian City-State Perugian Officers’ End of Term Audit (sindacato) in the Fourteenth Century
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| Publication date | 2017 |
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| Book title | Anticorruption in History |
| Book subtitle | From Antiquity to the Modern Era |
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| Pages (from-to) | 103-121 |
| Publisher | Oxford: Oxford University Press |
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| Abstract |
While auditing practices for public officials existed in all the Italian peninsula during the communal era, they had nowhere as prominent a place, or better surviving records, as in the Italian city-states. In this chapter, the author shows that the regulation of sindacato, an end-of-term audit for urban officials, was of a kind with normative and literary discourses about accountability, good government and the common good, but argues that these cannot be seen in isolation from documentary evidence. Based on a detailed analysis of the rich judicial and administrative records from fourteenth-century Perugia, this chapter shows that the connection between accountability of office and political legitimacy implicit in the sindacato is less straightforward than commonly thought. Rather than a marker of transparent, participatory politics, the sindacato was a complex, inherently biased, often slow and ineffectual mechanism, which could conceal as much as it revealed about the administration of the city.
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| Document type | Chapter |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198809975.003.0008 |
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