Doing the wrong things for the right reasons? “Do no harm” as a principle of reform

Abstract

This Brief explores what “do no harm” means for corruption control in fragile settings and analyses how aid agencies translate the concept into practice. Efforts to control corruption can do harm if they overwhelm a society’s capacity to absorb aid, if they are captured to damage rivals, or if they obstruct the peacebuilding process. Programmes and policies should aim to avoid such outcomes. However, a survey of practitioners shows that agencies give priority to minimising their own fiduciary risk, which is a skewed and narrow understanding of the “do no harm” principle. Policy and practice need to be much better aligned.

Citation

Johnston, M.; Johnsøn, J. Doing the wrong things for the right reasons? “Do no harm” as a principle of reform. U4 Anti-Corruption Resource Centre, CMI, Bergen, Norway (2014) 4 pp. [U4 Brief, December 2014:13]

Doing the wrong things for the right reasons? “Do no harm” as a principle of reform

Updates to this page

Published 1 January 2014