Ranging over a wide array of cases, Andrew Stark draws on legal, moral, and political thought - as well as the rhetoric of office-holders and the commentary of journalists - to analyse several decades of debate over conflict of interest in American public life. He offers new ways of interpreting the controversies about conflict of interest, explains their prominence in American political combat, and suggests how we might make them less venomous and intractable. Stark shows that over the past 40 years public opinion has shifted steadily towards an objective conception of conflict: instead of considering case-by-case motivations, we have adopted broadly prophylactic rules barring a variety of circumstances with no regard to whether individuals facing those circumstances would be moved in culpable ways. At the same time, we have shifted towards a subjective conception of interest: where we once focused narrowly on money, we now inquire into various commitments individuals might pursue in ways that could impair their judgement.
In exploring the consequences of these twin migrations - the passage of "conflict " from a subjective to an objective understanding, the transformation of "interest" from an objective to a subjective conception - the author aims to make our debates over public ethics less vexatious for officials, and more lucid for citizens.
- ISBN10 0674002334
- ISBN13 9780674002333
- Publish Date 7 September 2000
- Publish Status Out of Print
- Out of Print 17 June 2010
- Publish Country US
- Imprint Harvard University Press
- Format Hardcover
- Pages 384
- Language English