corruptioncan
Corruptioncan is a term used in speculative political science to describe a theoretical construct that captures how corruption can both arise and be constrained within public governance systems. The word blends corruption with can, signaling the idea that institutions act as a container with finite capacity to absorb illicit transactions before spillover harms governance. In this framework, corruption is not simply a matter of individual wrongdoing but a function of the interaction between incentives, enforcement, and transparency.
The model posits three main components. Incentives create opportunities for illicit activity, enforcement reduces those opportunities,
Origins and usage: Corruptioncan emerged in contemporary political science discussions as a heuristic for comparing governance
Criticism: The term is theoretical and not universally adopted. Critics argue it can be vague or conflating
See also: corruption, governance, anti-corruption measures, transparency, public procurement.