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Article

Is Civil Society Self-Regulation Effective? The case of Roman Third-Sector and "Mafia Capitale" Scandal

Details

Citation

Carolei D (2019) Is Civil Society Self-Regulation Effective? The case of Roman Third-Sector and "Mafia Capitale" Scandal. Journal of Law, Social Justice and Global Development, (24), pp. 115-128. https://doi.org/10.31273/LGD.2019.2407

Abstract
The purpose of this article is to measure the effectiveness of an exemplary civil society self-regulation against its own objectives, and to map out reasons behind non-compliance. It focuses on a checklist of indicators (CDV) developed by Italian Civil Society Organizations (CSOs) in the aftermath of the “Mafia Capitale” scandal when threatened by strict government regulation and by critical public opinion. Methodologically, this test of effectiveness is performed employing the blueprint designed by the One World Trust. To preview the outcome of this test of effectiveness, it will be concluded that self-regulation has been effective primarily in protecting the sector’s autonomy against hypothetical legislative interferences. Even if quantitative findings indicate a medium compliance rate, qualitative findings suggest that there can be many reasons behind non-compliance which sometimes do not depend entirely on CSO’s commitment to comply with voluntary standards. In this context, a distinction between objective and subjective reasons of non-compliance is drawn.

Keywords
Democracy; Social Culture; Civil Society; Self-Regulation; Effectiveness; Italian CSOs; Accountability

Journal
Journal of Law, Social Justice and Global Development, Issue 24

StatusPublished
Publication date31/12/2019
Publication date online20/01/2020
Date accepted by journal05/01/2020
URL
PublisherUniversity of Warwick
ISSN1467-0437

People (1)

Dr Domenico Carolei

Dr Domenico Carolei

Lecturer in Public Int. Law & Public Law, Law

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