This course is for students who have already gained a foundational understanding of law & society, public law, and criminal law. Building on those foundations, this course explores the meanings of democracy and corruption in domestic and international law, and the possibility for legal reforms to produce and protect good government. The first part of the course sets the foundation for our time together by examining general definitions of democracy, definitions of corruption, and worrisome trends connected to both—including high levels of wealth concentration, rising illiberal populism, and the failure of governments to mitigate climate change. The second part of the course discusses the prevention and criminalization of corrupt acts and the enforcement of those legal provisions. This part begins with domestic law, moves on to a sample of regional treaties, and ends with a detailed examination of the United Nations Convention Against Corruption. The third and final part of the course discusses “pressure points” (or potential growth areas) in anti-corruption law that have major implications for democratic integrity. Those areas include conflicts of interest, lobbying, campaign and party finance, and corporate corruption.