FOOTNOTES:Transcriber’s NotesINDEX
- Adams, Professor Henry C., [110], [177].
- Addams, Jane, [215].
- Ade, George, [146].
- Advantage, personal, the end of a corrupt act, [59], [60].
- Alger, G. W., [70].
- Allen, William H., [185].
- American Bar Association, [121].
- Anarchy, [17], [21], [29], [66], [82].
- Anthracite coal committees, [34].
- Apologies for political corruption, [3], [37].
- Aquinas, Thomas, [70].
- Aristotle, [87].
- Association to Prevent Corrupt Practices at Elections, New York, [272].
- “Auto-corruption,” [46], [60], [170], [199].
- Bacon, Lord, [90].
- Belmont, Perry, [239], [271].
- “Big Business,” [115], [163].
- Blackmail, [63].
- Bodley, J. E. C., [71].
- Bonaparte, Napoleon, [83].
- Boss, The (see also Machine), [23], [26], [71], [73], [105],
[240], [278], [279].
- Bribery, [44], [49], [59].
- Brinkley, Captain F., [102].
- Bryce, James, [216].
- Bureau of Corporations, [175].
- Bureau of Municipal Research, [184].
- Burke, Edmund, [213].
- Business, alleged to be made good by corruption, [4-13];
- and social morals, [67], [68], [75];
- and politics, corruption in, [161];
- state regulation of, [165], [171];
- and campaign contributions, [264];
- consolidation of, [163].
- “Business administration” of public affairs, [46].
- Campaign contributions, danger of plutocracy involved in, [71-74];
- problem of, [76];
- and theory of party support, [213];
- congressional appropriations, [221];
- publicity, [229];
- prohibition and restriction of, [244];
- from corporations, [244];
- from candidates, [248];
- from civil servants, [256];
- from individuals, [258];
- and campaign literature, [260];
- in small amounts, [261];
- time limits, [262];
- geographical limits, [263];
- and business interests, [264];
- of services, [267];
- in state and local contests, [268];
- in primaries and conventions, [270];
- results of reform, [273].
- Candidates, corruption and personal immorality as disqualifications, [15];
- and publicity, [240];
- contributions of, [248].
- Caritative function of the state, [70].
- Carnegie Foundation, [138], [149].
- Census statistics of cities, [186].
- Charles II., [89].
- Chicago, slaughter-house exposures, [163].
- Childs, Richard S., [297].
- China, [102].
- Church, the, [31], [36], [47], [66], [69].
- Citizenship, education for, [36].
- Civil service, Great Britain, [95-98];
- in police departments, [190];
- spoils system, [218];
- and campaign contributions, [256].
- Class war, [21], [29];
- social interest vs. class interest, [293].
- Cleveland, Grover, [107].
- Colleges and universities, [48], [132], [139], [143].
- Commissions, Public Service, [175].
- Commons, Professor John R., [29].
- Competition, [162].
- Congressional appropriations for campaign expenses, [221].
- Consensus of moral opinion on corruption, [58].
- Contractual nature of corrupt practices, [106].
- Corporation campaign contributions, [244].
- Corporations, Bureau of, [175].
- Corruption, defined, [41-48];
- distinguished from inefficiency, [48-51];
- a persistent problem, [81];
- limited to certain branches or spheres of government, [100-104];
- contractual nature of, [106];
- minor forms of, [113];
- classification of forms of, [116];
- in professional life, [177];
- in politics and business, [161], [169];
- international, [170];
- and the party organisation, [201];
- decreasing in progressive countries, [299].
- Crime and vice, [186].
- Curtis, George William, [128].
- Democracy, the corrupt machine as the saviour of, [17];
- oligarchy vs., [26];
- as means of establishing community of interest among the people, [30];
- liability of, to corruption, [52], [54], [296].
- “Democratic finance,” [182].
- Democratic National Committee, Report 1908, [233];
- time limit for contributions, [262].
- Despotism, [51].
- Dicey, Albert Venn, [175].
- Dill, James B., [168].
- Duty, political, [46], [51].
- Eaton, Dorman B., [95-98], [205].
- Economic evolution in relation to corruption, [52].
- Economics, university instruction in, [139].
- Education for citizenship, [36].
- Efficiency, [14], [16].
- England, [83], [95-98], [290], [295].
- English Corrupt Practices Act, [248].
- Europe, [30], [53], [74], [296].
- Evolution, [22], [29], [33], [52].
- Executive authorities, [56].
- Family, the, [48], [66].
- Finland, [83].
- Fire departments, personnel of, [191].
- Floquet, Charles, [71].
- Folk, Joseph W., [64], [291].
- Foote, Allen, Ripley, [197].
- Ford, Professor Henry J., [17], [30], [57], [215], [219],
[278].
- Foreign vote in the United States, [31].
- Franchises, Public Service, [11], [71], [73], [179].
- Future, the social, [173].
- Gambetta, Leon, [85].
- “Gambling Commission,” New York, [106].
- Gambling and vice, [6], [7], [8], [186].
- Garfield Corrupt Practices Act, [249], [270].
- George, Henry, [17].
- Germany, [84], [85], [143], [290].
- Ghent, W. J., [152].
- Goodnow, Professor F. J., [9], [23], [25].
- Graft, and other slang equivalents for corruption, [42].
- Greece, [82].
- Hadley, Arthur T., [266], [295].
- Hapgood, Hutchins, [14].
- Harvey, George, [131].
- Hewitt, Abram S., [17].
- Hobbes, Thomas, [82], [133].
- Howard, C., [61].
- Howe, Frederick C., [290], [295].
- Immigrants, [31].
- Inefficiency, [16], [48-51].
- Intentional character of corruption, [48].
- International corruption, [170].
- Japan, [83], [102].
- Journalism, [31], [121], [128], [279], [281],
[284].
- Judicial corruption, [56], [90], [92].
- Justice, ideal of, [70].
- Labour unions, [31];
- leaders of, [14], [66].
- Law, profession of, [121].
- Legislation against corrupt practices (see also campaign contributions), [75], [76].
- Legislative corruption, [45], [56].
- Machine, political (see also Boss, Party Organisation), [17], [20], [72].
- Magee, Chris., [99].
- Materialism, [53].
- Mencius, [51].
- Merriam, Professor C. E., [270].
- Michels, Professor Robert, [179].
- Mistresses, royal, [90].
- Mob rule, [17], [66].
- Monarchies, corruption in, as compared with democracies, [54].
- Monopolies, contracting rings, [13];
- era of consolidation, [163].
- Moral uprisings, [188].
- More, Paul Elmer, [153].
- Muckraking, [281].
- Municipal corruption, [83], [84], [98], [101], [184].
- Municipal ownership, [13].
- Municipal Research, Bureau of, [184].
- Myers, Gustavus, [280].
- Nast, Thomas, [280].
- Nationality, development of, [58];
- spirit of, [89].
- Nature of political corruption, [41].
- Negro vote, [36].
- Nepotism, [65], [66].
- New York city, [14], [17], [71], [98], [106], [108],
[280].
- Notoriety, corruption and, [277].
- Ochlocracy, [17], [66].
- Ogg, Frederick A., [235].
- Ohio State Board of Commerce, [197].
- Oligarchy, financial, [26], [54].
- Party organisation, [30], [43], [72], [201], [213],
[214].
- Passes, railroad, [60], [230].
- Pepys, Samuel, [93-95].
- Persistent problem, corruption as a, [81], [85], [86].
- Personal interest involved in corruption, [65].
- Plato, [6], [87].
- Plutocracy, [26], [74].
- Poland, [82].
- Police forces, [9], [21], [55], [190].
- Political science, university instruction in, [139].
- Politics, corruption not limited to, [46], [48];
- corruption in business and, [161], [169].
- Poole, Ernest, [280].
- Presidential Campaign Costs, 1908, [233].
- Press, the—see journalism.
- Primaries and conventions, political contributions for, [270].
- Privilege, special, [28], [290].
- Professions, corruption in the, [117].
- Professors, dismissal of, [147].
- Proletariat, [18].
- Prosperity and corruption, [5], [53].
- Protectionism, [293].
- Prussia, [54], [84], [101], [291].
- Publicity, campaign fund, [229];
- before or after election, [236];
- and candidates, [239];
- organisations reporting, [241].
- Public Service Commissions, [175].
- Public utility service, [28].
- Quay, Matthew S., [14].
- Railroads, nationalisation of, [181];
- passes, [60], [230].
- Reform and reformers, [5], [11], [57], [75], [84], [100],
[105], [287].
- Reformation, the, [82], [84].
- Republican National Committee, Report 1908, [233].
- Richmond, Mary E., [22].
- Riots, [19], [20], [66].
- Roberts, Peter, [34].
- Rome, [82], [89].
- Roosevelt, Theodore, [65], [221], [225].
- Root, Elihu, [244].
- Ross, Professor Edward A., [167], [302].
- Russia, [83].
- Salaries of public officials, [177].
- Salisbury, Lord, [84].
- Sandwich, Lord, [93].
- Schools, public, [23], [31], [36].
- Schurman, Jacob G., [146].
- Seeley, Professor J. R., [51], [88].
- Settlements, social, [36].
- Seward, William H., [71].
- Shaw, Bernard, [288].
- Short Ballot, [297].
- Simkhovitch, Mary K., [69].
- Sin and news, [284];
- “smokeless” sin, [286].
- Slang equivalents of corruption, [42].
- Social groups, interrelations, [66];
- individual interests and, [86].
- Socialism, [57], [152], [179].
- Society, the corrupt machine as the saviour of, [17];
- corruption as evidence of maladjustment in, [23];
- sweeping charges of corruption against, [57];
- responsible in part for existing corruption, [70];
- disintegrating effect of corruption upon, [81], [299];
- forms of corruption in, [116], [161];
- future of, [173];
- fundamental strength of institutions of, [301].
- Sociology, university instruction in, [139].
- Spain, [84].
- Special privileges, [28], [290].
- Spencer, Herbert, [91].
- State, welfare of the, contrasted with local welfare, [7];
- corruption not confined to the state, [46];
- caritative function of, [70];
- Greek classifications of, [87];
- primarily political forms of corruption, [169];
- international corruption, [170].
- State universities, [143].
- Steffens, Lincoln, [4], [99], [278].
- Stein, Freiherr vom, [101].
- Swinton, John, [122].
- Taft, William H., [236].
- Tammany Hall, [17], [108].
- Tax dodging, [60], [192].
- “Ten per cent. rake-off,” [105].
- Tennyson, Lord, [100].
- Thompson, David G., [108].
- Tweed, William M., [14], [98], [280].
- United States, suppression of vice in, [9];
- riots in, [19];
- integration of population in, [31];
- vote buying in, [36];
- political morality of, compared with Europe, [53], [296];
- uneven distribution of corruption in, [104];
- academic freedom in, [143];
- laisser faire doctrine in, [175];
- party functions in, [213];
- costliness of government in, [215];
- privilege in, [290].
- Universities and colleges, [48], [132], [139], [143].
- Vice, gambling and, [6], [7-8], [186].
- Virtue, political, [53], [54], [296].
- Walpole, Horace, [83].
- Ward, Professor Lester F., [122].
- Washington, D. C., [253].
- Wealth, growth of, [53].
- Weed, Thurlow, [71].
- Wendell, Professor Barrett, [285].
- Wheatley, Henry B., [94], [95].
- White, William Allen, [296].
- “Wide-open” communities, [7], [298].
- Wood, Fernando, [188].