'Lava Jato was perhaps the most important political event of the past decade in Brazil and in much of Latin America. While the story has been told and retold by journalists and pundits, Prosecutors, Voters, and The Criminalization of Corruption in Latin America stands apart for its systematic and rigorous comparative approach. The authors' offer us new and nuanced insights into how and why prosecutors in some countries were able to leverage previous legal reforms and made tactical decisions that enabled them to successfully carry out their ambitious investigative efforts.' Cesar Zucco, Fundação Getulio Vargas
1. Introduction: anti-Corruption crusades; Part I. Causes: 2. The drivers of prosecutorial zeal: institutional change and three 'Moments' (with stories from Brazil, Italy and Beyond); 3. Lava Jato in Peru: taking on the political and judicial establishments; 4. One crusade and two failed inquiries: Ecuador, Argentina and Mexico; Part II. Public: 5. Fighting corruption, curbing cynicism? Crusades, emotions and the future of politics; 6. Of cockroaches and superheroes: Talking about Lava Jato in Brazil and Peru; 7. Is prosecutorial zeal what partisans make of it? Survey evidence from Brazil; 8. Prosecutorial Trade-Offs and the precarity of hope: Survey evidence from Peru; Part III. Conclusions: 9. Theoretical lessons and a normative assessment; Bibliography; Index.