Your English writing platform
Discover LudwigExact(9)
I brought up the issue of land sales, the pervasiveness of corruption, of "gray areas" in Chinese business and life.
Outside Tihar Jail and elsewhere in the city, people have chanted Mr. Hazare' s name and voiced anger over the pervasiveness of corruption in daily life.
Nor did the Western training reckon with the pervasiveness of corruption, a scourge in the justice system as in so much else in Afghanistan.
Is the pervasiveness of corruption, a problem common to most countries in South-East Asia, at last getting a proper airing?The region is certainly awash with celebrated corruption cases.
The conspiracy, which also involved a lobbyist, another hospital executive and a health care consultant, has been seen as casting light on the pervasiveness of corruption in Albany and on the often-cozy ties there between legislators and hospitals.
In our telephone call, Steinmetz had described the saga of Simandou as "a very African story," and when we met I asked him how his company has dealt with the pervasiveness of corruption in Africa.
Similar(51)
But it speaks volumes about the pervasiveness of the corruption surrounding Afghanistan's elections — and about how little that corruption benefited the powerful, in part because of aggressive policing of the Sept. 18 voting and its aftermath by the Independent Election Commission and the Election Complaints Commission.
But their descriptions of the problem only underlined the pervasiveness of the corruption -- and how hard it would be for anyone who is part of the system to root it out.
They missed a number of important political factors: Russia's weak and unfocused leadership, the pervasiveness of its corruption, poor market regulation, and the fact that a handful of well-placed Russian officials would actually benefit personally from a devaluation.
However, taken together, the optics, indeed logic of issuance of additional loans to a demonstrably corrupt government and country calls into question the sincerity of the concerns voiced, by the West in particular, over the pervasiveness of said corruption and poor governance.
This article examines how the effect of education on institutional trust varies cross-nationally as a function of the pervasiveness of public-sector corruption.
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com