Natalia A. Volosin completed her PhD at Yale Law School, USA, and is now Senior Law Clerk in the National Attorney General's Office, Argentina
"""Natalia A. Volosin, is a prominent anticorruption campaigner and human rights advocate in Argentina. In her home country, she struggles against the defeatist attitude that corruption is so embedded in the culture that it is fruitless to strive for public integrity. Argentines sometimes claim that they cannot succeed in reducing corruption because, after all, they are all descended from smugglers. Volosin rejects such facile claims, and in this important book, she convincingly argues that legal and institutional change can lead to social change and a less corrupt future. I am pleased to introduce Volosin’s book to the community of scholars, activists, and engaged citizens concerned with the way anticorruption policy and the promotion of human rights can interact to promote good government."" — Susan Rose-Ackerman Henry R. Luce Professor of Jurisprudence, Emeritus, and Professorial Lecturer, Yale University, USA, and the author of Corruption and Government: Causes, Consequences and Reform (1999, 2nd edition with Bonnie Palifka, 2016). ""Argentina has had a massive corruption problem for two centuries. Today, as in much of the rest of South America, administrative procurement and infrastructural contracts feature over-invoicing, kickbacks, and more. Volosin relentlessly shines bright light on these abuses of the public purse. But even more intrepidly and importantly, she shows how Argentines can beat back corruption. Citizens can regain control, she argues, by linking human rights protection to anticorruption civil and legal actions. This is a bold and important book."" — Robert I. Rotberg, Harvard Kennedy School, USA, author of The Corruption Cure and editor of Corruption in Latin America ""Against the background of corruption cases in Argentina, Volosin addresses corruption as a structural problem which demands a systematic response. The fight against corruption -Volosin explains- should not be limited to litigation and sanctions; on the contrary, if we are going to prevail in this fight we need to create the appropriate institutional setting and also to modify the incentives' structure that is behind corruption. The book offers an excellent analysis of one of the main problems in the public agenda in many countries in the world."" — Delia Ferreira Rubio, Chair of Transparency International"