| advertise add site services publishers database health videos | ![]() | about toolbar stats live show health store more stuff JOIN/LOGIN |
Nepotism is favouritism granted to relatives or friends, without regard to their merit.[1] The word nepotism is from the Latin word nepos (meaning "nephew" or "grandchild").
[edit] Types of nepotism[edit] PapalMain article: Cardinal-nephew Nepotism gained its name after the church practice in the Middle Ages, when some Catholic popes and bishops, who had taken vows of chastity, and therefore usually had no children of their own, gave their nephews such positions of preference as were often accorded by fathers to son.[2] Several popes elevated nephews and other relatives to the cardinalate. Often, such appointments were a means of continuing a papal "dynasty". For instance, Pope Callixtus III, head of the Borgia family, made two of his nephews Cardinals; one of them, Rodrigo, later used his position as a Cardinal as a stepping stone to the papacy, becoming Pope Alexander VI.[3] Coincidentally, Alexander elevated Alessandro Farnese, his mistress's brother, to the cardinalate; Farnese would later go on to become Pope Paul III.[4] Paul also engaged in nepotism, appointing, for instance, two nephews, aged fourteen and sixteen, as cardinals. The practice was finally ended when Pope Innocent XII issued the bull Romanum decet Pontificem, in 1692.[2] The papal bull prohibited popes in all times from bestowing estates, offices, or revenues on any relative, with the exception that one qualified relative (at most) could be made a Cardinal. [edit] PoliticalNepotism is a common accusation in politics when the relative of a powerful figure ascends to similar power seemingly without appropriate qualifications. The British English expression "Bob's your uncle" is thought to have originated when Robert Arthur Talbot Gascoyne-Cecil, 3rd Marquess of Salisbury, promoted his nephew, Arthur Balfour, to the esteemed post of Chief Secretary for Ireland in what was widely seen as an act of nepotism.[original research?] [edit] Examples
[edit] AustraliaAnna Bligh, who won the 2008 Queensland State election has been accused of nepotism by giving her husband Greg Withers a bureaucratic position.[5] [edit] AzerbaijanPresident Heydar Aliyev appointed his son Ilham Aliyev Prime Minister during the last months of his presidency in 2003. Prior to the election the elder Aliyev dropped out and put his son up as presidential candidate instead. Aliyev was elected to the presidency and his father died just two months later, having successfully sealed the transfer of power to his son.[citation needed] [edit] BangladeshFormer PM Khaleda Zia is accused of favouring her son Tareq Zia in political arena[citation needed]. [edit] FijiIn 2009, Voreqe Bainimarama appointed Francis Kean, his brother-in-law, at the head of the naval forces (though Francis Kean had served a jail sentence)[citation needed]. [edit] France
[edit] Greece
[edit] India
[edit] MaldivesPresident Maumoon Abdul Gayyoom has had thirteen of his brothers, brothers-in-law, and classmates as members of his cabinet.[citation needed] [edit] Mauritania
[edit] North KoreaKim Jong-il became Chairman of the National Defense Commission, Supreme Commander of the Korean People's Army, and General Secretary of the Workers' Party of Korea (the ruling party since 1948), succeeding his father Kim Il-sung, the founder of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, who died in 1994. In turn, Kim Jong-un, his son is touted to succeed him.[citation needed] [edit] Pakistan
[edit] RomaniaElena Basescu, the daughter of the current president Traian Basescu, was elected president of the youth organization in the political party which was ruled by Traian Basescu before becoming president of Romania.[citation needed]She was subsequently elected, in June 2009,in the European Parliament, despite her youth and unpopularity. [edit] Sri LankaAfter winning the Presidential election in 2005 Mahinda Rajapaksa appointed 3 of his brothers to his government: Gotabhaya Rajapaksa, a former army officer, as the secretary of defense[citation needed]; Basil Rajapaksa as Senior Adviser to President[citation needed] and Chamal Rajapaksa as Cabinet Minister of Ports & Aviation and Irrigation & Water Management[citation needed]. He also appointed several close friends and associates as presidential advisers[citation needed], including Sajin Vass Gunawardene (CEO of the state owned Mihin Air, though he did not have any qualifications.[10]). Mahinda Rajapaksa also made his son a cadet officer even though he did not meet certain requirements[citation needed]. [edit] SyriaBashar al-Assad was appointed as President after his father Hafez's death, despite being too young for the post under the country's constitution as it then stood.[citation needed] [edit] Trinidad and TobagoPrime Minister Patrick Manning appointed his unelected wife Hazel Manning to the Cabinet for two consecutive terms, first as Minister of Education and currently as Minister of Local Government.[citation needed] [edit] United States
[edit] VietnamAfter "winning" the first ever democratic election in South Vietnam in 1955, Ngo Dinh Diem appointed his brother Ngo Dinh Nhu in charge of the private armies and secret police. Ngô Đình Cẩn, his younger brother, was put in charge of the former Imperial City of Huế.[citation needed] [edit] VenezuelaPresident Hugo Chavez and Cilia Flores, president of the Venezuela National Assembly, are also known for their influences to get family members in the government. Flores managed to place relatives in as many as nine of sixty permanent positions at the National Assembly- three siblings, two nephews, a cousin, the mother of that cousin, her mother-in-law and an aunt.[11][citation needed] [edit] RemarksAt some point, nepotism at high levels of government might serve to create what are in effect monarchies in nominal republics. In Syria, the case of the al-Assads mentioned above is one example. In Egypt, the likely similar succession of Gamal Mubarak to the Presidency upon Hosni Mubarak's death is equivalent.[original research?] [edit] In entertainmentOutside of national politics, accusations of "nepotism" are made in instances of prima facie favouritism to relatives, such as:
[edit] Social and economic effects
Nepotism and cronyism can have short- and long-term effects on a society, depending on the extent of the takeup and social acceptability of these practices. Areas in which, it is believed, nepotism has negative societal effects:
[edit] See also[edit] References
[edit] Further reading
[edit] External links
|
| ↑ top of page ↑ | about thumbshots |