Ebert JP, Wegner DM. Bending time to one’s will. In: Sinnott-Armstrong WP, Nadel L Conscious will and responsibility: A tribute to Benjamin Libet. New York: Oxford University Press; In Press.
Cross-country evidence shows that corruption could be controlled with support from the education, free press and independent judicial systems, yet the theoretical foundation for such a connection is somewhat limited. This paper investigates the mechanisms behind the anti-corruption effect of education through civic engagement. We argue that equal universal access to education and the free press is a crucial tool for the majority of citizens to acquire the correct information needed to succeed in their anti-corruption initiatives. A simple reduced-form theoretical model, which allows for heterogeneity in educational attainment among agents, is used to explain the link between education equality and corruption. Evidence from cross-national panel data estimation between 1990 and 2005 shows the robust support for the relationship. Education equality has independent and complimentary anti-corruption effects with press freedom and the duration of democracy.
Schacter DL, Chamberlain J, Gaesser B, Gerlach KD. Chapter. In: Nadel L, Sinnott-Armstrong W Memory and law: Perspectives from cognitive neuroscience. New York: Oxford University Press; In Press.