Brungardt Law's Lagniappe

Kleptocracy, Kakistocracy, and Governance | Jodi Vittori

1 h 24 min · 26 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Kleptocracy, Kakistocracy, and Governance | Jodi Vittori

Descripción

"Send a text sharing your thoughts about the episode." [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2523548/fan_mail/new] What happens when corruption stops being an isolated scandal and becomes part of the operating system itself? In this episode of Brungardt Law’s Lagniappe, Maurice Brungardt speaks with Jodi Vittori about the intersection of corruption, illicit finance, national security, and institutional decline. Drawing from her experience with the U.S. Air Force, NATO’s counter-corruption task force, Transparency International, and Georgetown University, Jodi explains how corruption evolves from individual misconduct into systemic kleptocracy — “government by thieves” — and why societies often fail to recognize the transition until public institutions begin to erode around them. This conversation explores corruption as both a legal and cultural phenomenon, examining how narratives, polarization, weak governance structures, and economic extraction can normalize institutional decay. Jodi discusses organized crime in the Balkans, mission failure in Afghanistan, the influence of money in democratic systems, the rise of “kakistocracy,” and the growing role of AI in scams, illicit finance, and governance. The discussion ultimately raises a difficult but increasingly relevant question: at what point does influence, access, and concentrated wealth begin reshaping governance itself? Jodi Vittori is a Professor of Practice and co-chair of the Global Politics and Security Program at the Georgetown University School of Foreign Service. A former U.S. Air Force officer, she served in Afghanistan, Iraq, the Balkans, South Korea, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, and NATO assignments focused on corruption, terrorism finance, and national security. Jodi previously worked with Transparency International and is widely recognized for her research on corruption, kleptocracy, illicit finance, and state fragility.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Brungardt Law's Lagniappe!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

42 episodios

episode Protecting the People Creating Culture | The Ella Project artwork

Protecting the People Creating Culture | The Ella Project

"Send a text sharing your thoughts about the episode." [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2523548/fan_mail/new] New Orleans is celebrated around the world for its music, art, food, and traditions. So, what protects the people who create that culture? In this episode, Maurice Brungardt speaks with Ashlye Keaton and Gene Meneray of The Ella Project about the legal, business, and policy challenges facing Louisiana artists. From intellectual property rights and Mardi Gras Indian copyright protections to arts funding, affordability, artificial intelligence, and the future of New Orleans' cultural economy, they explore what it takes to sustain the artists and culture bearers who drive one of America's most distinctive creative ecosystems. Ashlye Keaton is a New Orleans-based intellectual property and entertainment attorney, educator, and cultural advocate. She co-founded The Ella Project, where she provides pro bono legal services to artists, musicians, filmmakers, and culture bearers throughout Louisiana. She is widely recognized for her work protecting Mardi Gras Indian intellectual property rights and teaches at both Tulane Law School and the University of New Orleans. Gene Meneray is a co-founder of The Ella Project and a longtime arts administrator and cultural advocate. A native New Orleanian, he has held leadership roles with the Arts Council of New Orleans, the Louisiana Crafts Guild, and YAYA (Young Aspirations Young Artists), and currently serves as Chair of the Louisiana State Arts Council. His work focuses on strengthening the intersection of culture, entrepreneurship, and economic development.

9 de jun de 20261 h 5 min
episode Kleptocracy, Kakistocracy, and Governance | Jodi Vittori artwork

Kleptocracy, Kakistocracy, and Governance | Jodi Vittori

"Send a text sharing your thoughts about the episode." [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2523548/fan_mail/new] What happens when corruption stops being an isolated scandal and becomes part of the operating system itself? In this episode of Brungardt Law’s Lagniappe, Maurice Brungardt speaks with Jodi Vittori about the intersection of corruption, illicit finance, national security, and institutional decline. Drawing from her experience with the U.S. Air Force, NATO’s counter-corruption task force, Transparency International, and Georgetown University, Jodi explains how corruption evolves from individual misconduct into systemic kleptocracy — “government by thieves” — and why societies often fail to recognize the transition until public institutions begin to erode around them. This conversation explores corruption as both a legal and cultural phenomenon, examining how narratives, polarization, weak governance structures, and economic extraction can normalize institutional decay. Jodi discusses organized crime in the Balkans, mission failure in Afghanistan, the influence of money in democratic systems, the rise of “kakistocracy,” and the growing role of AI in scams, illicit finance, and governance. The discussion ultimately raises a difficult but increasingly relevant question: at what point does influence, access, and concentrated wealth begin reshaping governance itself? Jodi Vittori is a Professor of Practice and co-chair of the Global Politics and Security Program at the Georgetown University School of Foreign Service. A former U.S. Air Force officer, she served in Afghanistan, Iraq, the Balkans, South Korea, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, and NATO assignments focused on corruption, terrorism finance, and national security. Jodi previously worked with Transparency International and is widely recognized for her research on corruption, kleptocracy, illicit finance, and state fragility.

26 de may de 20261 h 24 min
episode Vietnam, Institutional Failure, and the Human Cost | Rick McAllister artwork

Vietnam, Institutional Failure, and the Human Cost | Rick McAllister

"Send a text sharing your thoughts about the episode." [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2523548/fan_mail/new] Organizations cannot succeed when leadership fails to clearly define mission legitimacy, objectives, or measurable outcomes. Yet it is individuals who bear the cost. In this episode of Brungardt Law’s Lagniappe, Maurice Brungardt speaks with Vietnam veteran Rick McAllister, who served with the U.S. Army’s 101st Airborne Division in 1970, including duty as a tunnel rat — one of the Vietnam War’s most dangerous and psychologically demanding roles. Rick reflects on combat, underground tunnel warfare, PTSD, survivor’s guilt, veteran mental health, and the long-term psychological effects of war that followed him home for decades. He also discusses the disconnect between political leadership and battlefield realities, the silence many veterans carried after Vietnam, and the importance of trauma recovery and human connection. After years of struggling with the aftermath of combat and health complications tied to Agent Orange exposure, Rick discovered an unexpected path toward healing through the Camino de Santiago pilgrimage in Spain. What began as physical rehabilitation after open-heart surgery became a transformative journey centered on reflection, reconciliation, resilience, and peace. This is the first part of a two-part conversation documenting Rick’s preparation to return to Vietnam for the first time in 56 years to meet former North Vietnamese and Viet Cong veterans in pursuit of understanding and reconciliation.

19 de may de 20261 h 11 min
episode Culture as Institutional Infrastructure: Stewardship, Extraction, and the Chevron Case artwork

Culture as Institutional Infrastructure: Stewardship, Extraction, and the Chevron Case

"Send a text sharing your thoughts about the episode." [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2523548/fan_mail/new] In this quarterly reflection, Maurice Brungardt examines Louisiana’s coastal crisis and the recent Supreme Court ruling involving Chevron through a lens rarely applied to environmental litigation: culture as institutional infrastructure. Drawing from conversations with diplomats, artists, military leaders, educators, and civic figures featured on Brungardt Law’s Lagniappe, this episode explores how wetlands, fisheries, neighborhoods, rituals, music, food, and collective memory form part of the social architecture that sustains communities over generations. Rather than approaching the Chevron litigation solely as a legal or environmental dispute, this reflection asks a broader question: what happens when extraction outpaces stewardship? Through insights shared by guests including Jamar Pierre, Raelle Myrick Hodges, Sophia Riggio, Ambassador Luis Moreno, Tim Davis, Harry Thomas, Linda Taglialatela, and others, the discussion examines how culture preserves resilience, identity, institutional trust, and civic continuity in times of disruption. This reflection discusses the intersection of environmental degradation, institutional legitimacy, economic development, leadership, and long-term societal resilience. It considers how strong societies depend not only on physical infrastructure, but also on preserving the human relationships and cultural systems rooted in place.

12 de may de 202624 min
episode Decision-Making Across Institutions: A Conversation with Tim Davis artwork

Decision-Making Across Institutions: A Conversation with Tim Davis

"Send a text sharing your thoughts about the episode." [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2523548/fan_mail/new] In this episode, we hear from retired U.S. Ambassador Timothy Davis whose career encompassed the Foreign Service and the Marine Corps. Whether he was leading our diplomatic mission in Qatar, serving as executive assistant to several U.S. Secretaries of State, or guiding troops in the field, Ambassador Davis shares lessons learned from over 30 years of public service. Ambassador Davis reflects on the evolution of leadership from the military to diplomacy, where authority gives way to influence, persuasion, and long-term strategy. He offers candid insight into what it means to lead when outcomes are uncertain, decisions have consequences, and success often depends on navigating institutional culture as much as external threats. Ambassador Davis discusses transitioning from military decisiveness to diplomatic patience; how timing, luck, and institutional awareness shape career trajectories; State Department dynamics; misconceptions about the Middle East; as well as the relevance of culture and subnational diplomacy to New Orleans. A conversation on leadership, service, and perspective grounded in experience at the highest levels of government, yet deeply personal in its reflections on purpose and growth.

5 de may de 20261 h 7 min