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Sarah Chayes

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Sarah Chayes


Born
in Washington, D.C., The United States
March 05, 1962

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Sarah Chayes is a former senior associate in the Democracy and Rule of Law Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and former award-winning reporter for National Public Radio, she also served as special advisor to the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

She graduated from Phillips Academy, Andover (1980) and Harvard University (1984) with a degree in History, magna cum laude. She was awarded the Radcliffe College History Prize. She then served in the Peace Corps in Morocco, returning to Harvard to earn a master's degree in History, specializing in the Medieval Islamic period. Besides English, she speaks Pashto, French, and Arabic.

From 1996 to 2002, she served as Paris reporter for National Public Radio, covering France,
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Average rating: 4.04 · 2,109 ratings · 328 reviews · 8 distinct worksSimilar authors
Thieves of State: Why Corru...

4.11 avg rating — 1,027 ratings — published 2015 — 10 editions
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The Punishment of Virtue: I...

3.91 avg rating — 732 ratings — published 2006 — 22 editions
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On Corruption in America: A...

4.11 avg rating — 339 ratings — published 2020 — 6 editions
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Everybody Knows: Corruption...

4.60 avg rating — 5 ratings4 editions
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The Punishment Of Virtue: W...

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Thunder God: Values, Corrup...

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The Punishment of Virtue By...

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Reconstruction magazine Vol...

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“Corruption, it made plain, was not solely a humanitarian affair, an issue touching on principles or values alone. It was a matter of national security—Afghan national security and, by extension, that of the United States. And if corruption was driving people to violent revolt in Afghanistan, it was probably doing likewise in other places. Acute government corruption may in fact lie at the root of some of the world’s most dangerous and disruptive security challenges—among them the spread of violent extremism. That basic fact, elusive to this day, is what this book seeks to demonstrate.”
Sarah Chayes, Thieves of State: Why Corruption Threatens Global Security

“The phenomenon we confront is the worldwide equivalent of a forest fire, of the Blitz. We must react accordingly—with that same impulsive solidarity. Or, to restate this idea in terms of the other metaphor that has threaded through these pages: the only way to defeat the tiny but powerful coalition of meat hogs that is imperiling our whole community is to join together in a far-reaching egalitarian coalition and confront them in unison.”
Sarah Chayes, On Corruption in America: And What Is at Stake

“Criticizing the “corrupt, questionable, and unqualified leaders [placed] into key positions,” the argument rested on the principle of command responsibility: “The international community has enabled and encouraged bad governance through agreement and silence, and often active partnership.” Moving the issue away from the humanitarian terrain where it often resides, we made corruption relevant to war fighters by explaining its centrality to prospects of victory. “Afghans’ acute disappointment with the quality of governance . . . has contributed to permissiveness toward, or collusion with,” the Taliban, we wrote, laboring to stultify our language with a credible amount of jargon. In plain English: why would a farmer stick out his neck to keep Taliban out of his village if the government was just as bad? If, because of corruption, an ex-policeman like Nurallah was threatening to turn a blind eye to a man planting an IED, others were going further. Corruption, in army-speak, was a force multiplier for the enemy. “This condition is a key factor feeding negative security trends and it undermines the ability of development efforts to reverse these trends,” our draft read.”
Sarah Chayes, Thieves of State: Why Corruption Threatens Global Security

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