Kleptocracy, Kakistocracy, and Governance | Jodi Vittori
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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.