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Whistle-blowing intentions and behaviour in Ugandan public procurement

Brenda Tumuramye (Department of Procurement and Supply Chain Management, Makerere University Business School, Kampala, Uganda)
Joseph Mpeera Ntayi (Department of Procurement and Supply Chain Management, Makerere University Business School, Kampala, Uganda)
Moses Muhwezi (Department of Procurement and Supply Chain Management, Makerere University Business School, Kampala, Uganda)

Journal of Public Procurement

ISSN: 1535-0118

Article publication date: 4 June 2018

372

Abstract

Purpose

This study aims to investigate the whistle-blowing behaviour in Ugandan public procurement by using whistle-blowing supporting institutions, procuring and disposing entity (PDE) ethical climate and whistle-blowing expectancy.

Design/methodology/approach

A quantitative cross-sectional survey was conducted using a sample of 118 drawn from a population of 179 central government (PDEs). Data were collected using self-administered questionnaires, resulting in 222 usable questionnaires from 70 PDEs, representing a response rate of 62.71 per cent.

Findings

The results reveal that the whistle-blowing supporting institutions and PDE ethical climate are significant predictors of whistle-blowing intentions and behaviour, accounting for 30.2 per cent of the variance. The authors therefore recommend that whistle-blowing supporting institutions, like the Whistle Blowers Protection Act, should be reviewed and strengthened to promote whistle-blowing intentions and behaviour. This could be done through reviewing the Act to make it enforceable, giving power to the whistle-blowers, strengthening policies, developing safeguards against retaliation by making every chief executive officer in the public sector accountable, increasing whistle-blowing incentives and providing whistle-blowing hotlines for anonymous whistle-blowers. PDEs should also create conducive ethical climates that encourage people to voice their concerns internally or externally, and ethical committees should be established within PDEs and other bodies such as the Inspector General of Government for ensuring that whistle-blowing systems are in place and promoted. There is a need to increase whistle-blowing expectancy through the effective handling of reported cases to their conclusion and the use of role models.

Keywords

Citation

Tumuramye, B., Ntayi, J.M. and Muhwezi, M. (2018), "Whistle-blowing intentions and behaviour in Ugandan public procurement", Journal of Public Procurement, Vol. 18 No. 2, pp. 111-130. https://doi.org/10.1108/JOPP-06-2018-008

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2018, Emerald Publishing Limited

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