1
Johnston M. The search for definitions: the vitality of politics and the issue of corruption. International Social Science Journal. 1996;48:321–35.
2
HURSTFIELD J. POLITICAL CORRUPTION IN MODERN ENGLAND: THE HISTORIAN’S PROBLEM. History. 1967;52:16–34. doi: 10.1111/j.1468-229X.1967.tb01188.x
3
World Bank. Helping Countries Combat Corruption. 1997.
4
Alatas SH. Corruption: its nature, causes and functions. Aldershot: Avebury 1990.
5
Buchan, B. ; Hill L. An Intellectual History of Political Corruption. 1st ed. 2014. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan 2014.
6
Euben JP. Corruption. Political innovation and conceptual change. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1989.
7
Huntington SP, Harvard University. Center for International Affairs. Political order in changing societies. [New pbk. ed.]. New Haven: Yale University Press 2006.
8
Knights M. Old Corruption: What British history can tell us about corruption today – Transparency International UK. http://www.transparency.org.uk/publications/old-corruption-what-british-history-can-tell-us-about-corruption-today/#.W1hFf9VKgdV
9
Wagenaar, Toon Kerkhoff / Ronald Kroeze / Pieter1. Corruption and the Rise of Modern Politics in Europe in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries: A Comparison between France, the Netherlands, Germany and England. Introduction. Journal of Modern European History. 2013;11:19–30.
10
Kroeze R, Vitória A, Geltner G, editors. Anticorruption in history: from antiquity to the modern era. First edition. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2018.
11
Kroeze R, Vitória A, Geltner G, editors. Anti-corruption in history: from antiquity to the modern era. New York, NY: Oxford University Press 2018.
12
Colin Leys. What is the Problem about Corruption? The Journal of Modern African Studies. 1965;3:215–30.
13
Nye JS. Corruption and Political Development: A Cost-Benefit Analysis. American Political Science Review. 1967;61:417–27. doi: 10.2307/1953254
14
Philp M. Defining Political Corruption. Political Studies. 1997;45:436–62. doi: 10.1111/1467-9248.00090
15
Pocock JGA. The Machiavellian moment: Florentine political thought and the Atlantic republican tradition. 2nd pbk. ed., with a new afterword. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press 2003.
16
Pocock JGA. Virtue, commerce, and history: essays on political thought and  history, chiefly in the eighteenth century. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1985.
17
Rothstein B, Varraich A. Making sense of corruption. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press 2017.
18
J. P. Olivier de Sardan. A Moral Economy of Corruption in Africa? The Journal of Modern African Studies. 1999;37:25–52.
19
James C. Scott. The Analysis of Corruption in Developing Nations. Comparative Studies in Society and History. 1969;11:315–41.
20
Thompson DF. Theories of Institutional Corruption. Annual Review of Political Science. 2018;21:495–513. doi: 10.1146/annurev-polisci-120117-110316
21
Thompson D. Two Concepts of Corruption. https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2304419
22
Wraith R, Simpkins E. Corruption in developing countries. London: Allen & Unwin 1963.
23
Mark Knights, ‘Religion, Anti-popery and corruption’ in Michael Braddick and Phil Withington (eds.), Popular Culture and Political Agency in Early Modern England and Ireland (2017). https://clas.warwick.ac.uk/Extracts/Index/HI2D2
24
Howard CHD. Sir John Yorke of Nidderdale, 1565-1634. London: Sheed & Ward 1939.
25
M K. Religion, Anti-popery and corruption. Popular Culture and Political Agency in Early Modern England and Ireland: Essays in Honour of John Walter. Blackwell 2017:181–202.
26
Howard CHD. Appendix. Sir John Yorke of Nidderdale, 1565-1634. London: Sheed & Ward 1939:47–58.
27
Letter accusing Earl of Leicester.
28
Dolan FE. Whores of Babylon: Catholicism, gender, and seventeenth-century print culture. Notre Dame, Ind: University of Notre Dame Press 2005.
29
Evans EJ. The contentious tithe: the tithe problem and English agriculture,  1750-1850. London (etc.): Routledge and Kegan Paul 1976.
30
Fontaine L. The moral economy: poverty, credit, and trust in early modern Europe. New York: Cambridge University Press 2014.
31
Peter Lake, ‘Anti-popery: The Structure of a Prejudice’, in Richard Cust and Ann Hughes (eds.), Conflict in Early Stuart england: Studies in Religion and Politics 1603-42 (1989). https://clas.warwick.ac.uk/Extracts/Index/HI2D2
32
Hawkes D. The culture of usury in renaissance England. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan 2010.
33
David Hayton. Moral Reform and Country Politics in the Late Seventeenth-Century House of Commons. Past & Present. 1990;48–91.
34
Griffiths P, Fox A, Hindle S. The experience of authority in early modern England. Basingstoke: Macmillan 1996.
35
Innes J. Inferior politics: social problems and social policies in eighteenth-century Britain. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2009.
36
Dietz F, Morton AD, Roggen L, et al., editors. Illustrated religious texts in the north of Europe, 1500-1800. Farnham Surrey, England: Ashgate 2014.
37
Nelson B. The idea of usury, from tribal brotherhood to universal otherhood. 2d ed., enl. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 1969.
38
Questier MC. Sir Henry Spiller, Recusancy and the Efficiency of the Jacobean Exchequer. Historical Research. 1993;66:251–66. doi: 10.1111/j.1468-2281.1993.tb01812.x
39
Andy Wood. Subordination, Solidarity and the Limits of Popular Agency in a Yorkshire Valley c. 1596-1615. Past & Present. 2006;41–72.
40
Douglas Beets S. Global Corruption and Religion: An Empirical Examination. Journal of Global Ethics. 2007;3:69–85. doi: 10.1080/17449620600991614
41
Paldam M. Corruption and Religion: Adding to the Economic Model. 2000. http://www.martin.paldam.dk/Papers/Gamle/Religion-x.PDF
42
Treisman D. The causes of corruption: a cross-national study. Journal of Public Economics. 2000;76:399–457. doi: 10.1016/S0047-2727(99)00092-4
43
Underkuffler LS. Captured by evil: the idea of corruption in law. New Haven: Yale University Press 2013.
44
Underkuffler LS. Captured by evil: the idea of corruption in law. New Haven: Yale University Press 2013.
45
Weaver GR, Agle BR. Religiosity and Ethical Behavior in Organizations: A Symbolic Interactionist Perspective. Academy of Management Review. 2002;27:77–97. doi: 10.5465/amr.2002.5922390
46
Yamamoto K. Taming capitalism before its triumph: public service,  distrust, and ‘projecting’ in early modern England. First edition. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2018.
47
KOJI YAMAMOTO. Piety, Profit and Public Service in the Financial Revolution. The English Historical Review. 2011;126:806–34.
48
The Grand Remonstrance (1641). https://go.exlibris.link/bg0KxfWb
49
Noonan J. Chapter 12 - Angelo. Bribes. Berkeley: University of California Press 1988:334–65.
50
Mathews N. Francis Bacon: the history of a character assassination. New Haven: Yale University Press 1996.
51
Peltonen M. The Cambridge companion to Bacon. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1996.
52
DAMIAN X. POWELL. Why Was Sir Francis Bacon Impeached? The Common Lawyers and the Chancery Revisited: 1621. History. 1996;81:511–26.
53
Wilfrid Prest. Judicial Corruption in Early Modern England. Past & Present. 1991;67–95.
54
Tite CGC. Impeachment and parliamentary judicature in early Stuart England. London: Athlone Press 1974.
55
Rudolph J. Common law and Enlightenment in England, 1689-1750. Woodbridge, Suffolk, UK: The Boydell Press 2013.
56
Peck LL. Corruption at the Court of James I: the undermining of legitimacy. After the Reformation: essays in honor of J.H. Hexter. Manchester: Manchester University Press 1980:75–93.
57
Bellany AJ. The politics of court scandal in early modern England: news culture and the Overbury affair, 1603-1660. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2002.
58
Hurstfield J. Freedom, corruption and government in Elizabethan England. London: Cape 1973.
59
Sharpe K. Faction and parliament: essays on early Stuart history. London: Methuen 1985.
60
Cogswell T, Cust R, Lake P, et al. Politics, religion, and popularity in early Stuart Britain: essays in honour of Conrad Russell. Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press 2002.
61
Review by:                          Pauline Croft. Review: Patronage and Corruption, Parliament and Liberty in Seventeenth-Century England. The Historical Journal. 1993;36:415–21.
62
Richard Cust. Prince Charles and the Second Session of the 1621 Parliament. The English Historical Review. 2007;122:427–41.
63
Peck LL. Court patronage and corruption in early Stuart England. London: Routledge 1993.
64
Kyle CR. Parliament, politics and elections, 1604-1648. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2001.
65
Russell C. Parliaments and English politics, 1621-1629. Oxford: Clarendon Press 1979.
66
Russell C. Unrevolutionary England, 1603-1642. London: Hambledon Press 1990.
67
Zaller R. The Parliament of 1621: a study in constitutional conflict. Berkeley: University of California Press 1971.
68
M. Monopolies and Corruption: the 1621 Parliament - Early Stuart Libels. http://www.earlystuartlibels.net/htdocs/monopolies_section/M0.html
69
A. P. Perceval Keep and Jo. Arthur. Star Chamber Proceedings against the Earl of Suffolk and Others. The English Historical Review. 1898;13:716–29.
70
Noonan, Bribes, chapter on Pepys; Knights. https://clas.warwick.ac.uk/Extracts/Index/HI2D2
71
Was Samuel Pepys corrupt?
72
Knights M. Samuel Pepys and Corruption. Parliamentary History. 2014;33:19–35. doi: 10.1111/1750-0206.12087
73
Tadmor N. Family and friends in eighteenth-century England: household, kinship, and patronage. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press 2001.
74
J. P. Olivier de Sardan. A Moral Economy of Corruption in Africa? The Journal of Modern African Studies. 1999;37:25–52.
75
Samuel Pepys: Diary, Letters, Family Tree, Maps, Encyclopedia, Discussion and more. https://www.pepysdiary.com/
76
Bryant A. Samuel Pepys. New ed. London: Collins 1949.
77
Tomalin C. Samuel Pepys: the unequalled self. London: Viking 2002.
78
Granovetter M. The Social Construction of Corruption. On capitalism. Stanford, Calif: Stanford University Press 2007:152–72.
79
Ben-Amos IK. The culture of giving: informal support and gift-exchange in early modern England. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press 2008.
80
Fontaine L. Political Economics and Cultures of Exchange. The moral economy: poverty, credit, and trust in early modern Europe. New York: Cambridge University Press 2014:217–45.
81
Gowing L, Hunter M, Rubin M. Love, friendship and faith in Europe, 1300-1800. Basingstoke, Hants: Palgrave Macmillan 2005.
82
Felicity Heal. Food Gifts, the Household and the Politics of Exchange in Early Modern England. Past & Present. 2008;41–70.
83
Heal F. Bribes and Benefits. The power of gifts: gift exchange in early modern England. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2014:180–206.
84
Friendship and allegiance in eighteenth-century literature [electronic resource] : The politics of private virtue in the age of Walpole / Emrys Jones.
85
Liebersohn H. The return of the gift: European history of a global idea. New York: Cambridge University Press 2011.
86
Lindgren J. The Theory, History, and Practice of the Bribery-Extortion Distinction. University of Pennsylvania Law Review. 1993;141. doi: 10.2307/3312572
87
Klekar C, Zionkowski L. The culture of the gift in eighteenth-century England. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan 2009.
88
Avner Offer. Between the Gift and the Market: The Economy of Regard. The Economic History Review. 1997;50:450–76.
89
Peck LL. Court patronage and corruption in early Stuart England. London: Routledge 1993.
90
R. Harding, "Corruption and the Moral Boundaries of Patronage in the Renaissance ", in G. F. Lytle and S. Orgel (eds.), Patronage in the Renaissance (Princeton, 1981). https://clas.warwick.ac.uk/Extracts/Index/HI2D2
91
Perkin HJ. The origins of modern English society, 1780-1880. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul 1969.
92
Ledeneva AV. Russia’s economy of favours: blat, networking and informal exchange. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1998.
93
Pettigrew WA. The changing place of fraud in seventeenth-century public debates about international trading corporations. Business History. 2018;60:305–20. doi: 10.1080/00076791.2017.1389901
94
English intercourse with Siam in the seventeenth century : Anderson, John, 1833-1900 : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive. https://archive.org/details/englishintercou01andegoog
95
Collis M. Siamese White. Main. London: Faber & Faber 2008.
96
Henry Horwitz. The East India Trade, the Politicians, and the Constitution: 1689-1702. Journal of British Studies. 1978;17:1–18.
97
NUALA ZAHEDIEH. Regulation, rent-seeking, and the Glorious Revolution in the English Atlantic economy. The Economic History Review. 2010;63:865–90.
98
Bingham, Hiram J. Elihu Yale: The American Nabob of Queen Square. Literary Licensing, LLC 2012.
99
Deacon D, Russell P, Woollacott A. Transnational lives: Biographies of global modernity, 1700-present. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan 2010.
100
17th Century Siam—A Writer’s Guide: Notes on Elihu Yale. http://17thcenturysiam.blogspot.com/2009/11/t.html
101
Chaudhuri KN. The English East India Company: the study of an early joint-stock company, 1600-1640. [London]: F. Cass 1965.
102
Chaudhuri KN. The trading world of Asia and the English East India Company, 1660-1760. Digitally printed 1st pbk. version. Cambridge [Eng.]: Cambridge University Press 2006.
103
Davis R. English Foreign Trade, 1660-1700. The Economic History Review. 1954;7. doi: 10.2307/2591619
104
Davis R. English Foreign Trade, 1700-1774. The Economic History Review. 1962;15. doi: 10.2307/2598999
105
Gauci P. The politics of trade: the overseas merchant in state and society, 1660-1720. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2001.
106
Gauci P. Emporium of the world: the merchants of London, 1660-1800. London: Hambledon Continuum 2007.
107
Dirks NB. The scandal of empire: India and the creation of imperial Britain. Cambridge, Mass: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press 2006.
108
Erikson E. Between monopoly and free trade: the English East India Company, 1600-1757. Princeton: Princeton University Press 2014.
109
Lawson P. The East India Company: a history. London: Longman 1993.
110
Louis WR, Canny NP, Low AM. The Oxford history of the British Empire. Oxford: Oxford University Press 1998.
111
Mentz S. The English gentleman merchant at work: Madras and the City of London 1660-1740. Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press, University of Copenhagen 2005.
112
Collinson P. Wherein Lay The Late Seventeenth-Century State? Charles Davenant Meets Streynsham Master. Journal of Historical Sociology. 2002;15:96–101. doi: 10.1111/1467-6443.00170
113
Sherman AA. Pressure from Leadenhall: The East India Company Lobby, 1660–1678. Business History Review. 1976;50:329–55. doi: 10.2307/3112999
114
Stern PJ. The company-state: corporate sovereignty and the early modern foundations of the British Empire in India. New York: Oxford University Press 2011.
115
Pettigrew WA, Gopalan M. The East India Company, 1600-1857: essays on Anglo-Indian connection. London: Routledge 2017.
116
Robert Walcott. The East India Interest in the General Election of 1700-1701. The English Historical Review. 1956;71:223–39.
117
Davies KG. Joint-Stock Investment in the Later Seventeenth Century. The Economic History Review. 1952;4. doi: 10.2307/2599423
118
Maitland FW. State, trust, and corporation. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2003.
119
PETTIGREW, WILLIAM AVAN CLEVE, GEORGE W. PARTING COMPANIES: THE GLORIOUS REVOLUTION, COMPANY POWER, AND IMPERIAL MERCANTILISM. The Historical Journal. ;57:617–38.
120
Scott WR. The constitution and finance of English, Scottish and Irish joint-stock companies to 1720. New York: Peter Smith 1951.
121
Stern PJ, Wennerlind C. Mercantilism reimagined: political economy in early modern Britain and its empire. Oxord: Oxford University Press 2014.
122
Turner HS. The corporate commonwealth: pluralism and political fictions in England, 1516-1651. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press 2017.
123
Withington P. The politics of commonwealth: citizens and freemen in early modern England. Cambridge, England: Cambridge Univeristy Press 2005.
124
Withington P. Public Discourse, Corporate Citizenship, and State Formation in Early Modern England. The American Historical Review. 2007;112.
125
Zacek N. Settler Society in the English Leeward Islands, 1670-1776. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2010.
126
Smith MD. Sex and sexuality in early America. New York: New York University Press 1998.
127
A Death in the Morning: The Murder of Daniel Parke, Antigua, 1710. Cultures and identities in Colonial British America. Baltimore, Maryland: Johns Hopkins University Press 2015:223–43.
128
Miller HH. Colonel Parke of Virginia: the greatest hector in the town : a biography. Chapel Hill, N.C.: Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill 1989.
129
Full text of ‘The making of the West Indies. The Gordons as colonists’. https://archive.org/stream/makingofwestindi00bull/makingofwestindi00bull_djvu.txt
130
Hamilton D. Private enterprise and public service: Naval contracting in the Caribbean, 1720–50. Journal for Maritime Research. 2004;6:37–64. doi: 10.1080/21533369.2004.9668336
131
Koontz, Louis Knott, 1890-1951. Robert Dinwiddie, his career in American... Glendale, Calif., Clark, 1941. 1941.
132
Smith SD. Slavery, family, and gentry capitalism in the British Atlantic: the world of the Lascelles,1648-1834. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2006.
133
LASCELLES, Henry (1690-1753), of Harewood and Northallerton, Yorks. | History of Parliament Online. http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1715-1754/member/lascelles-henry-1690-1753
134
Webb SS. Marlborough’s America. New Haven: Yale University Press 2013.
135
Barber S. The disputatious Caribbean: the West Indies in the seventeenth century. First edition. New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan 2014.
136
Amussen SD. Caribbean exchanges: slavery and the transformation of English society, 1640-1700. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press 2007.
137
Dunn RS, Omohundro Institute of Early American History & Culture. Sugar and slaves: the rise of the planter class in the English West  Indies, 1624-1713. Chapel Hill: Published for the Omohundro Institute of Early  American History and Culture, Williamsburg, Virginia, by the  University of North Carolina Press 2000.
138
Gragg LD. Englishmen transplanted: the English colonization of Barbados 1627-1660. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2003.
139
Canny NP, Pagden A. Colonial identity in the Atlantic world: 1500-1800. Princeton: Princeton University Press 1987.
140
Pares R, Humphreys RA, Humphreys E. The historian’s business and other essays. Oxford: Clarendon Press 1961.
141
Parker M. The sugar barons. London: Windmill 2012.
142
Louis WR, Marshall PJ, Low AM. The Oxford history of the British Empire. Oxford: Oxford University Press 1998.
143
Zahedieh N. The capital and the colonies: London and the Atlantic economy, 1660-1700. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press 2010.
144
Zahedieh N. Making Mercantilism Work: London Merchants and Atlantic Trade in the Seventeenth Century. Transactions of the Royal Historical Society. 1999;9. doi: 10.2307/3679396
145
Bonomi PU, Omohundro Institute of Early American History & Culture. The Lord Cornbury scandal: the politics of reputation in British  America. Chapel Hill, N.C.: University of North Carolina Press for  the Omohundro Institute of Early American History & Culture,  Williamsburg, Virginia 1998.
146
McDiarmid JF, Collinson P. The monarchical republic of early modern England: essays in response to Patrick Collinson. Aldershot, England: Ashgate 2007.
147
Library of Congress Symposia on the American Revolution. The development of a revolutionary mentality: papers presented at  the first symposium, May 5 and 6, 1972. Washington: Library of Congress 1972.
148
Lustig ML. Robert Hunter, 1666-1734, New York’s Augustan statesman. Syracuse, N.Y.: Syracuse University Press 1983.
149
Sutherland L, Whiteman A, Bromley JS, et al. Statesmen, scholars and merchants: essays in eighteenth-century  history presented to Dame Lucy Sutherland. Oxford: Clarendon Press 1973.
150
Southerne T, Behn A, Behn A, et al. Versions of Blackness: key texts on slavery from the seventeenth century. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2007.
151
Littleton E. The groans of the plantations, or a true account of their grievous and extreme sufferings by the heavy impositions upon sugar and other hardships: relating more particularly to the island of Barbados. London: Printed by M. Clark 1689.
152
Davies G. The Seamy Side of Marlborough’s War. Huntington Library Quarterly. 1951;15:21–44. doi: 10.2307/3816257
153
Dennis Rubini. Politics and the Battle for the Banks, 1688-1697. The English Historical Review. 1970;85:693–714.
154
Ashworth WJ. Customs and excise: trade, production, and consumption in England, 1640-1845. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2003.
155
Brewer J. Money, Money, Money: The Growth in Debts and Taxes. The sinews of power: war, money and the English state, 1688-1783. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press 1990:88–134.
156
Tomlinson HC. Place and Profit: An Examination of the Ordnance Office, 1660-1714: The Alexander Prize Essay. Transactions of the Royal Historical Society. 1975;25. doi: 10.2307/3679086
157
Dickinson HT. A companion to eighteenth-century Britain. Oxford, UK: Blackwell Pub 2002.
158
Brewer J, Hellmuth E, German Historical Institute in London. Rethinking Leviathan: the eighteenth-century state in Britain and Germany. London: German Historical Institute 1999.
159
O’Brien PK. The Political Economy of British Taxation, 1660-1815. The Economic History Review. 1988;41. doi: 10.2307/2597330
160
Dickinson HT. Britain and the French Revolution, 1789-1815. Basingstoke: Macmillan 1989.
161
O’Brien, Patrick K.Hunt, Philip A. THE RISE OF A FISCAL STATE IN ENGLAND, 1485-1815. Historical Research. 1993;66:129–76.
162
David Hebb, ‘Profiting from misfortune : corruption and the Admiralty under the early Stuarts’ in Cogswell, Cust and Lake, Politics, Religion and Popularity in Early Stuart England (2002). https://clas.warwick.ac.uk/Extracts/Index/HI2D2
163
Fynn-Pa J, editor. War, entrepreneurs, and the state in Europe and the Mediterranean, 1300-1800. Leiden, Netherlands: Brill 2014.
164
Graham A. Corruption, party, and government in Britain, 1702-1713. First edition. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press 2015.
165
Graham A, Walsh P. The British fiscal-military states, 1660-c.1783. London: Routledge 2016.
166
Hebb D. Profiting from misfortune: corruption and the Admiralty under the early Stuarts. Politics, religion, and popularity in early Stuart Britain: essays in honour of Conrad Russell. Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press 2002.
167
Hoon EE. The organization of the English customs system, 1696-1786. Newton Abbot: David & Charles 1968.
168
Tomlinson HC. Place and Profit: An Examination of the Ordnance Office, 1660-1714: The Alexander Prize Essay. Transactions of the Royal Historical Society. 1975;25. doi: 10.2307/3679086
169
Brewer J. The sinews of power: war, money and the English state, 1688-1783. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press 1990.
170
Braddick MJ. The nerves of state: taxation and the financing of the English  state, 1558-1714. Manchester: Manchester University Press 1996.
171
Braddick MJ. State formation in early modern England, c. 1550-1700. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2000.
172
Pavarala V. Cultures of corruption and the corruption of culture : the East India Company and the Hastings impeachment’. Corrupt histories. Rochester, NY: University of Rochester Press 2004:291–336.
173
Nicholas Dirks, The Scandal of Empire: India and the Creation of Imperial Britain. https://clas.warwick.ac.uk/Extracts/Index/HI2D2
174
Lawson P, Phillips J. "Our Execrable Banditti”: Perceptions of Nabobs in Mid-Eighteenth Century Britain. Albion. 1984;16:225–41. doi: 10.2307/4048755
175
Edmund Burke, The Warren Hastings Trial and the Moral Dimension of Corruption. https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/pdfplus/10.1057/palgrave.polity.2300051
176
Michael H. Fisher. Indirect Rule in the British Empire: The Foundations of the Residency System in India (1764-1858). Modern Asian Studies. 1984;18:393–428.
177
Furber H. John Company at work: a study of European expansion in India in the late eighteenth century. New York: Octagon Books 1970.
178
Jasanoff M. Edge of Empire: conquest and collecting in the east, 1750-1850. London: Harper Perennial 2006.
179
Marshall PJ. East Indian fortunes: the British in Bengal in the eighteenth century. Oxford [Eng.]: Clarendon Press 1976.
180
Marshall PJ. Presents. Impeachment of Warren Hastings. Oxford University Press, 1965 :130–62.
181
Louis WR, Marshall PJ, Low AM. The Oxford history of the British Empire. Oxford: Oxford University Press 1998.
182
Sutherland LS. The East India Company in eighteenth-century politics. Oxford: Clarendon Press 1962.
183
Chatterjee A. Representations of India, 1740-1840: the creation of India in the colonial imagination. Basingstoke: Macmillan 1998.
184
Lawson P. The East India Company: a history. London: Longman 1993.
185
Lawson P, Phillips J. "Our Execrable Banditti”: Perceptions of Nabobs in Mid-Eighteenth Century Britain. Albion. 1984;16:225–41. doi: 10.2307/4048755
186
Bruce Lenman and Philip Lawson. Robert Clive, the ‘Black Jagir’, and British Politics. The Historical Journal. 1983;26:801–29.
187
McGilvary GK. Guardian of the East India Company: the life of Laurence Sulivan. London: Tauris Academic Studies 2006.
188
Sutherland LS. The East India Company in eighteenth-century politics. Oxford: Clarendon Press 1962.
189
Travers R. Ideology and empire in eighteenth-century India: the British in Bengal. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2008.
190
Nightingale P. Fortune and integrity: a study of moral attitudes in the Indian diary of George Paterson, 1769-1774. Delhi: Oxford University Press 1985.
191
Bayly CA. Imperial meridian: the British Empire and the World, 1780-1830. London: Longman 1989.
192
Braibanti RJD, Duke University. Commonwealth-Studies Center. Asian bureaucratic systems emergent from the British Imperial tradition. Durham [N.C.]: Duke University Press for the Duke University  Commonwealth-Studies Center 1966.
193
Margot C. Finn. Colonial Gifts: Family Politics and the Exchange of Goods in British India, c. 1780-1820. Modern Asian Studies. 2006;40:203–31.
194
Katherine Prior, Lance Brennan and Robin Haines. Bad Language: The Role of English, Persian and Other Esoteric Tongues in the Dismissal of Sir Edward Colebrooke as Resident of Delhi in 1829. Modern Asian Studies. 2001;35:75–112.
195
Bowen HV, Lincoln M, Rigby N, et al. The worlds of the East India Company. Woodbridge: Boydell Press in association with the National Maritime Museum and University of Leicester 2002.
196
Fisher MH. Indirect rule in India: residents and residency system, 1764-1858. India: Oxford University Press 1998.
197
Peers DM. Colonial knowledge and the military in India, 1780–1860. The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History. 2005;33:157–80. doi: 10.1080/03086530500123747
198
Pitts J. A turn to empire: the rise of imperial liberalism in Britain and France. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press 2006.
199
Carson P. The East India Company and religion, 1698-1858. Suffolk: Boydell & Brewer 2012.
200
Jasanoff M. Edge of Empire: conquest and collecting in the east, 1750-1850. London: Harper Perennial 2006.
201
Webster A. The twilight of the East India Company: the evolution of Anglo-Asian commerce and politics, 1790-1860. Suffolk: Boydell & Brewer 2009.
202
WILKINSON C. THE EAST INDIA COLLEGE DEBATE AND THE FASHIONING OF IMPERIAL OFFICIALS, 1806–1858. The Historical Journal. 2017;60:943–69. doi: 10.1017/S0018246X16000492
203
Wilson JE, Hopkins AG, Vaughan M, et al. The domination of strangers: Modern governance in Eastern India, 1780-1835. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan 2008.
204
Aylmer GE. From Office-Holding to Civil Service: The Genesis of Modern Bureaucracy: The Prothero Lecture. Transactions of the Royal Historical Society. 1980;30. doi: 10.2307/3679004
205
Rudolph LI, Rudolph SH. Authority and Power in Bureaucratic and Patrimonial Administration: A Revisionist Interpretation of Weber on Bureaucracy. World Politics. 1979;31:195–227. doi: 10.2307/2009942
206
Aylmer GE. The King’s servants: the Civil Service of Charles I, 1625-1642. Revised ed. London (etc.): Routledge and Kegan Paul 1974.
207
Aylmer GE. The state’s servants: the Civil Service of the English Republic,  1649-1660. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul 1973.
208
Aylmer GE. The Crown’s servants: government and Civil Service under Charles II, 1660-1685. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2002.
209
Braddick MJ. State formation in early modern England, c. 1550-1700. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2000.
210
Brewer J, Hellmuth E, German Historical Institute in London. Rethinking Leviathan: the eighteenth-century state in Britain and Germany. London: German Historical Institute 1999.
211
Brewer J. The Central Offices of Government. The sinews of power: war, money and the English state, 1688-1783. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press 1990:64–87.
212
Condren C. Argument and authority in early modern England: the presupposition of oaths and offices. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press 2006.
213
Greenaway J. Celebrating Northcote/Trevelyan: Dispelling the Myths. Public Policy and Administration. 2004;19:1–14. doi: 10.1177/095207670401900101
214
Horder J. Criminal misconduct in office: law and politics. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2018.
215
John A. Shedd. Thwarted Victors: Civil and Criminal Prosecution against Parliament’s Officials during the English Civil War and Commonwealth. Journal of British Studies. 2002;41:139–69.
216
Lucy S. Sutherland and J. Binney. Henry Fox as Paymaster General of the Forces. The English Historical Review. 1955;70:229–57.
217
The Law Commission’s History of Misconduct in Public Office.
218
Philip Harling. The Duke of York Affair (1809) and the Complexities of War-Time Patriotism. The Historical Journal. 1996;39:963–84.
219
Clark A. Scandal: the sexual politics of the British constitution. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press 2004.
220
Rudolph J. Common law and Enlightenment in England, 1689-1750. Woodbridge, Suffolk, UK: The Boydell Press 2013.
221
Coffman D. Questioning credible commitment: perspectives on the rise of financial capitalism. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2013.
222
Doyle W. Venality: the sale of offices in eighteenth-century France. Oxford: Clarendon Press 1996.
223
Kreike E, Jordan WC. Corrupt histories. Rochester, NY: University of Rochester Press 2004.
224
Hardacre PH. Clarendon, Sir Robert Howard, and Chancery Office-Holding at the Restoration. Huntington Library Quarterly. 1975;38:207–14. doi: 10.2307/3816880
225
Law Journal Library American Journal of Legal History - HeinOnline.org. http://heinonline.org/HOL/Page?public=false&handle=hein.journals/amhist19&id=288
226
Swart KW. Sale of offices in the seventeenth century. The Hague: M. Nijhoff 1949.
227
Landau N. The trading justice’s trade. In: Landau N, ed. Law, crime, and English society, 1660-1830. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2002:46–70.
228
Woodford J. On Trial at Last and Going Down. The boss of Bethnal Green: Joseph Merceron, the Godfather of Regency London. London: Spitalfields Life Books 2016.
229
Webb S. ‘The rule of the boss’. English local government. London 1963:79–90.
230
Barber M, Sewell G, Taylor S, et al. Arthur Burns, ’ ‘My Unfortunate Parish’’: Anglican Urban Ministry In Bethnal Green c.1809-.1850. From the Reformation to the permissive society: a miscellany in celebration of the 400th anniversary of Lambeth Palace Library. Woodbridge, Suffolk: Boydell Press 2010:271–80.
231
Condren C. Argument and authority in early modern England: the presupposition of oaths and offices. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press 2006.
232
Harris T. Officeholding in Early Modern England. The politics of the excluded, c.1500-1850. Basingstoke: Palgrave 2001:153–95.
233
Social Change in the Age of Enlightenment: Edinburgh 1660-1760.
234
Peck LL. Court patronage and corruption in early Stuart England. London: Routledge 1993.
235
Braddick MJ. State formation in early modern England, c. 1550-1700. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2000.
236
Eastwood D. Government and community in the English provinces, 1700-1870. Basingstoke: Macmillan 1997.
237
John A. Shedd. Thwarted Victors: Civil and Criminal Prosecution against Parliament’s Officials during the English Civil War and Commonwealth. Journal of British Studies. 2002;41:139–69.
238
Sweet R. Corrupt and Corporate Bodies: attitudes to corruption in eighteenth-century and early nineteenth-century towns. Corruption in urban politics and society, Britain 1780-1950. Aldershot, Hampshire, England: Ashgate 2007:41–56.
239
Peck LL. Corruption and the Economy. Court patronage and corruption in early Stuart England. Boston: Unwin Hyman 1990.
240
Appleby J. Economic thought and ideology in seventeenth-century England. Princeton: Princeton University Press 1978.
241
Goldsmith MM. Private vices, public benefits: Bernard Mandeville’s social and  political thought. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1985.
242
Philip Harling and Peter Mandler. From ‘Fiscal-Military’ State to Laissez-Faire State, 1760-1850. Journal of British Studies. 1993;32:44–70.
243
Hilton B. The age of atonement: the influence of evangelicalism on social and economic thought, 1795-1865. Oxford: Clarendon 1988.
244
Lisa Hill. Adam Smith and the Theme of Corruption. The Review of Politics. 2006;68:636–62.
245
Hirschman AO. The passions and the interests: political arguments for capitalism before its triumph. First Princeton Classics edition. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press 2013.
246
Neal L. I am not master of events: the speculations of John Law and Lord Londonderry in the Mississippi and South Sea bubbles. New Haven: Yale University Press 2012.
247
Law Literature, and the Settlement of Regimes. Folger Inst .
248
Berg M, Eger E. Luxury in the eighteenth century: debates, desires and delectable goods. Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave 2003.
249
Berry CJ. The idea of luxury: a conceptual and historical investigation. Cambridge [England]: Cambridge University Press 1994.
250
Sekora J. Luxury: the concept in Western thought, Eden to Smollett. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press 1977.
251
Yamamoto K. Taming capitalism before its triumph: public service,  distrust, and ‘projecting’ in early modern England. First edition. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2018.
252
Clark A. Scandal: the sexual politics of the British constitution. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press 2004.
253
Innes J. Inferior politics: social problems and social policies in eighteenth-century Britain. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2009.
254
Bonomi PU, Omohundro Institute of Early American History & Culture. The Lord Cornbury scandal: the politics of reputation in British  America. Chapel Hill, N.C.: University of North Carolina Press for  the Omohundro Institute of Early American History & Culture,  Williamsburg, Virginia 1998.
255
Dabhoiwala F. Sex and Societies for Moral Reform, 1688–1800. The Journal of British Studies. 2007;46:290–319. doi: 10.1086/510889
256
Griffiths P, Jenner MSR. Londinopolis: essays in the cultural and social history of early  modern London. Manchester: Manchester University Press 2000.
257
Dabhoiwala F. The origins of sex: a history of the first sexual revolution. London: Penguin 2013.
258
Rose Anthony. The Jeremy Collier stage controversy, 1698-1726. New York: B. Blom 1966.
259
Carol Howard. Wollstonecraft’s Thoughts on Slavery and Corruption. The Eighteenth Century. 2004;45:61–86.
260
Perry C. Literature and favoritism in early modern England. Cambridge: Cambridge University 2006.
261
Griffiths P, Fox A, Hindle S. The experience of authority in early modern England. Basingstoke: Macmillan 1996.
262
David Hayton. Moral Reform and Country Politics in the Late Seventeenth-Century House of Commons. Past & Present. 1990;48–91.
263
Roberts MJD. Making English morals: voluntary association and moral reform in England, 1787-1886. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press 2004.
264
Kahn VA, Hutson L, editors. Rhetoric and law in early modern Europe. New Haven: Yale University Press 2001.
265
Joanna Innes, Inferior Politics (2009), chapter 5: Politics and Moral. https://clas.warwick.ac.uk/Extracts/Index/HI2D2
266
Durston C. Cromwell’s major-generals: godly government during the English  Revolution. Manchester: Manchester University Press 2001.
267
Thomas W. Laqueur. The Queen Caroline Affair: Politics as Art in the Reign of George IV. The Journal of Modern History. 1982;54:417–66.
268
Clark A. Queen Caroline and the Sexual Politics of Popular Culture in London, 1820. Representations. 1990;47–68. doi: 10.2307/2928399
269
Hunt L. The Invention of pornography: obscenity and the origins of  modernity, 1500-1800. New York: Zone Books 1993.
270
Slavin AJ, Carlton C. State, sovereigns & society in early modern England: essays in  honour of A.J. Slavin. Stroud: Sutton 1998.
271
Harris F. A passion for government: the life of Sarah, duchess of Marlborough. Oxford: Clarendon 1991.
272
Tyacke N. England’s long Reformation, 1500-1800. London: U.C.L. 1998.
273
Hilton B. The age of atonement: the influence of evangelicalism on social and economic thought, 1795-1865. Oxford: Clarendon 1988.
274
Full text of ‘The authentic and impartial life of Mrs. Mary Anne Clarke’. https://archive.org/details/authenticimparti00clar
275
Two Concepts of Trust. The Journal of Politics. Published Online First: 2009.
276
Maloy JS. The colonial American origins of modern democratic thought. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2010.
277
Fox-Decent E. Sovereignty’s promise: the state as fiduciary. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2011.
278
Cope M, Queensland University of Technology. Centre for Commercial and Property Law. Equity: issues and trends : the importance and pervasiveness of equitable doctrines and principles in modern private, commercial, and public law. Sydney: Federation Press, in association with the Centre for Commercial and Property Law, Queensland University of Technology 1995.
279
Dunn J. Rethinking modern political theory: essays 1979-83. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1985.
280
HARDIN R. The Street-Level Epistemology of Trust. Politics & Society. 1993;21:505–29. doi: 10.1177/0032329293021004006
281
Hardin, Russell 1940-. Trust and trustworthiness. 1st pbk. ed. New York, NY: Russell Sage Foundation 2004.
282
Hoffer PC. The law’s conscience: equitable        constitutionalism in America. New ed. Chapel Hill: North Carolina U.P. 1990.
283
Burns JH. Bentham and the French Revolution. Transactions of the Royal Historical Society. 1966;16. doi: 10.2307/3678797
284
Maitland FW. State, trust, and corporation. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2003.
285
Sztompka P. Trust: a sociological theory. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1999.
286
Mendle M. The Observator observed. Henry Parker and the English civil war: the political thought of the public’s ‘privado’. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1995:99–110.
287
Natelson RG. The Constitution and the Public Trust. https://go.exlibris.link/mYPW0w9s
288
Fortier M. The culture of equity in early modern England. Aldershot, Hants, England: Ashgate 2005.
289
Fortier M. The culture of equity in Restoration and eighteenth-century Britain and America. Farnham, Surrey, England: Ashgate 2015.
290
J. A. Downie. The Commission of Public Accounts and the Formation of the Country Party. The English Historical Review. 1976;91:33–51.
291
John R. Breihan. William Pitt and the Commission on Fees, 1785-1801. The Historical Journal. 1984;27:59–81.
292
Harling P. The waning of ‘Old Corruption’: the politics of economical reform in Britain, 1779-1846. Oxford [England]: Clarendon Press 1996.
293
Olive Anderson. The Janus Face of Mid-Nineteenth-Century English Radicalism: The Administrative Reform Association of 1855. Victorian Studies. 1965;8:231–42.
294
Graham A. Auditing Leviathan: Corruption and State Formation in Early Eighteenth-Century Britain. The English Historical Review. 2013;128:806–38. doi: 10.1093/ehr/cet111
295
Peacey J. Print and public politics in the English Revolution. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2013.
296
Poovey M. A history of the modern fact: problems of knowledge in the sciences of wealth and society. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 1998.
297
Seaward P. The Cavalier Parliament, the 1667 Accounts Commission and the Idea of Accountability. Parliament at work: parliamentary committees, political power and public access in early modern England. Woodbridge: Boydell Press 2002:149–68.
298
Soll J. The reckoning: financial accountability and the making and breaking of nations. London: Allen Lane 2014.
299
John Torrance. Social Class and Bureaucratic Innovation: The Commissioners for Examining the Public Accounts 1780-1787. Past & Present. 1978;56–81.
300
Sabapathy J. Officers and Accountability in Medieval England, 1170-1300. First edition. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press 2014.
301
McElligott J. William Hone (1780-1842), Print Culture and the Nature of Radicalism. Varieties of seventeenth- and early eighteenth-century English radicalism in context. Burlington, VT: Ashgate 2011:241–60.
302
Wood M. Radicals and the Law: Blasphemous Libels and the Three Trials of William Hone. Radical satire and print culture, 1790-1822. Oxford: Clarendon Press 1994:96–154.
303
Francis P, Shelburne WP, Everett CW, et al. The letters of Junius. London: Faber & Gwyer 1927.
304
Lindsay DW. Junius and the Grafton administration 1768–1770. Prose Studies. 1986;9:160–76. doi: 10.1080/01440358608586279
305
Hone and his context. http://honearchive.org/biographical/brief-intro.html
306
Smith O. The politics of language, 1791-1819. Oxford: Clarendon 1984.
307
Hackwood FW. William Hone: his life and times. London: T.F. Unwin 1912.
308
Carretta V. The snarling muse: verbal and visual political satire from Pope to  Churchill. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press 1983.
309
Hone W, Rickword E, Cruikshank G. Radical squibs and loyal ripostes: satirical pamphlets of the  Regency Period, 1819-1821. Bath: Adams and Dart 1971.
310
Gilmartin, ‘William Cobbett and the Politics of System’ | Romantic Circles. http://www.rc.umd.edu/praxis/conspiracy/gilmartin/kg2.html
311
Gilmartin K. Leigh Hunt and the end of radical opposition. Print politics: the press and radical opposition in early  nineteenth-century England. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1996:195–226.
312
Richard Hendrix. Popular Humor and ‘The Black Dwarf’. Journal of British Studies. 1976;16:108–28.
313
Taylor DF. The politics of parody: a literary history of caricature, 1760-1830. New Haven: Yale University Press 2018.
314
Peacey Jason. Royalist News, Parliamentary Debates and Political Accountability, 1640–60. Parliamentary History. 2007;26:328–45.
315
Kemp G, McElligott J, Clegg CS, et al. Censorship and the press, 1580-1720. London: Pickering & Chatto 2009.
316
Robertson R. Censorship and conflict in seventeenth-century England: the subtle art of division. University Park, Pa: Pennsylvania State University Press 2009.
317
Hellmuth E, German Historical Institute in London. The Transformation of political culture: England and Germany in the  late eighteenth century. Oxford: Oxford University Press (for) the German Historical  Institute 1990.
318
Zaret D. Origins of democratic culture: printing, petitions, and the public  sphere in early-modern England. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press 2000.
319
Bradley JE. Popular politics and the American Revolution in England: petitions, the crown, and public opinion. Macon, Ga: Mercer 1986.
320
Shapiro I. Political representation. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press 2009.
321
Davis JC. Utopia and the ideal society: a study of English Utopian writing, 1516-1700. Cambridge [Eng.]: Cambridge University Press 1981.
322
Rees C. Utopian imagination and eighteenth-century fiction. London: Longman 1996.
323
Harling P. The waning of ‘Old Corruption’: the politics of economical reform in Britain, 1779-1846. Oxford [England]: Clarendon Press 1996.
324
W. D. Rubinstein. The End of ‘Old Corruption’ in Britain 1780-1860. Past & Present. 1983;55–86.
325
Frank O’Gorman. The Unreformed Electorate of Hanoverian England: The Mid-Eighteenth Century to the Reform Act of 1832. Social History. 1986;11:33–52.
326
Archibald S. Foord. The Waning of ‘The Influence of the Crown’. The English Historical Review. 1947;62:484–507.
327
Kreike E, Jordan WC. Corrupt histories. Rochester, NY: University of Rochester Press 2004.
328
Philip Harling. Rethinking ‘Old Corruption’. Past & Present. 1995;127–58.
329
Burns A, Innes J. Rethinking the age of reform: Britain 1780-1850. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press 2007.
330
Why does Corruption Matter? Reforms and Reform Movements in Britain and Germany in the second half of the Eighteenth Century.
331
Burns A, Innes J. Rethinking the age of reform: Britain 1780-1850. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press 2007.
332
Kroeze R, Vitória A, Geltner G, editors. Anti-corruption in history: from antiquity to the modern era. New York, NY: Oxford University Press 2018.
333
LAWSON P. Grenville’s Election Act, 1770. Historical Research. 1980;53:218–28. doi: 10.1111/j.1468-2281.1980.tb01744.x
334
North DC, Wallis JJ, Weingast BR. Violence and Social Orders: A Conceptual Framework for Interpreting Recorded Human History. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2009.
335
Mark Philp, ‘The fragmented ideology of reform’ in The French Revolution and British popular politics (2002). https://clas.warwick.ac.uk/Extracts/Index/HI2D2
336
SALMON P. Electoral reform and the political modernization of England, 1832–1841. Parliaments, Estates and Representation. 2003;23:49–67. doi: 10.1080/02606755.2003.9522167
337
Brock MG. The Great Reform Act. London: Hutchinson 1973.
338
Cannon J. Parliamentary reform, 1640-1832. Aldershot: Gregg Revivals 1994.
339
Ian R. Christie. Economical Reform and ‘The Influence of the Crown’, 1780. The Cambridge Historical Journal. 1956;12:144–54.
340
Ian R. Christie. The Yorkshire Association, 1780-4: A Study in Political Organization. The Historical Journal. 1960;3:144–61.
341
Christie IR. Wilkes, Wyvill and reform: the parliamentary reform movement in  British politics, 1760-1785. London: Macmillan 1962.
342
O’Gorman F. Voters, patrons and parties: the unreformed electoral system of  Hanoverian England 1734-1832. Oxford: Clarendon 1989.
343
Paul Langford. Property and ‘Virtual Representation’ in Eighteenth-Century England. The Historical Journal. 1988;31:83–115.
344
Salmon P. Electoral reform at work: local politics and national parties, 1832-1841. Suffolk: Royal Historical Society/Boydell Press 2002.
345
Phillips JA. Electoral behavior in unreformed England: plumpers, splitters, and straights. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press 1982.
346
Mircea Popa. Elites and Corruption: A Theory of Endogenous Reform and a Test Using British Data. World Politics. 2015;67:313–52.
347
Review by:                          Gregory Claeys. Review: The Triumph of Class-Conscious Reformism in British Radicalism, 1790-1860. The Historical Journal. 1983;26:969–85.
348
Harvey K. The kiss in history. Manchester: Manchester University Press 2005.
349
D. C. Moore. Concession or Cure: The Sociological Premises of the First Reform Act. The Historical Journal. 1966;9:39–59.
350
Becoming Denmark: Historical Designs of Corruption Control. Social Research. Published Online First: 2013.
351
Rosenberg H. Bureaucracy, aristocracy and autocracy: the Prussian experience  1660-1815. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press 1958.
352
Rothstein B, Teorell J. Getting to Sweden, Part II: Breaking with Corruption in the Nineteenth Century. Scandinavian Political Studies. 2015;38:238–54. doi: 10.1111/1467-9477.12048
353
Waquet J-C. Corruption: ethics and power in Florence, 1600-1770. University Park, Pa: Pennsylvania State University Press 1992.
354
The 1854 Northcote-Trevelyan Report;
355
Trevelyan on the enduring danger of patronage.
356
Greenaway J. Celebrating Northcote/Trevelyan: Dispelling the Myths. Public Policy and Administration. 2004;19:1–14. doi: 10.1177/095207670401900101
357
NEUFELD M. PARLIAMENT AND SOME ROOTS OF WHISTLE BLOWING DURING THE NINE YEARS WAR. The Historical Journal. 2014;57:397–420. doi: 10.1017/S0018246X13000459
358
KNIGHTS M. Parliament, Print and Corruption in Later Stuart Britain. Parliamentary History. 2008;26:49–61. doi: 10.1111/j.1750-0206.2007.tb00628.x
359
Horne T. Politics in a Corrupt Society: William Arnall’s Defense of Robert Walpole. Journal of the History of Ideas. 1980;41. doi: 10.2307/2709276
360
Innes J. Changing Perceptions of the State in the Late Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Centuries. Journal of Historical Sociology. 2002;15:107–13. doi: 10.1111/1467-6443.00172
361
Burns A, Innes J. Rethinking the age of reform: Britain 1780-1850. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press 2007.
362
Goodwin A. The friends of liberty: the English democratic movement in the age  of the French Revolution. London: Hutchinson 1979.
363
Tilly C. Popular contention in Great Britain, 1758-1834. Boulder: Paradigm Publishers 2005.
364
Thompson EP. The making of the English working class. London: Penguin 1991.
365
Black EC. The Association: British extraparliamentary political organization,  1769-1793. Cambridge (Mass.): Harvard University Press 1963.
366
Burns A, Innes J. Rethinking the age of reform: Britain 1780-1850. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press 2007.
367
Thompson DF. Ethics in Congress: from individual to institutional corruption. Washington, DC: Brookings Institutions 1995.