ABSTRACT

Organised crime, corruption, and terrorism are considered to pose significant and unrelenting threats to the integrity, security, and stability of contemporary societies. Alongside traditional criminal enforcement responses, strategies focused on following the money trail of such crimes have become increasingly prevalent. These strategies include anti-money laundering measures to prevent ‘dirty money’ from infiltrating the legitimate economy, proceeds of crime powers to target the accumulated assets derived from crime, and counter-terrorist financing measures to prevent ‘clean’ money from being used for terrorist purposes.

This collection brings together 17 emerging researchers in the fields of anti-money laundering, proceeds of crime, counter-terrorist financing and corruption to offer critical analyses of contemporary anti-assets strategies and state responses to a range of financial crimes. The chapters focus on innovative anti-financial crime measures and assemblages of governance that have become a feature of late modernity and on the ways in which individual nation states have responded to anti-money laundering and counter-terrorist financing requirements in light of their specific social, political, and economic contexts. This collection draws on perspectives from law, criminology, sociology, politics, and other disciplines. It adopts a much-needed international approach, focusing not only on expected jurisdictions, such as the United States and United Kingdom, but also on analysis from countries such as Qatar, Kuwait, Iran, and Nigeria. The authors stand out for their fresh and original research, which places them at the cutting edge of the subject.

This book provides a comprehensive, insightful, and original study of an important and developing field for academics, students, practitioners, and policymakers in multiple jurisdictions.

 

 

part I|73 pages

Innovative techniques and new perspectives on existing techniques

chapter 3|14 pages

Cooperation between financial intelligence units in the EU

Challenges for the rights to privacy and data protection

chapter 4|14 pages

Risk-based approach

Is it the answer to effective anti-money laundering compliance?

chapter 5|13 pages

Unexplained wealth orders

An evolving approach to enhancing the effectiveness of the anti-money laundering regime in the United Kingdom

part II|73 pages

Innovative assemblages of government

chapter 7|14 pages

Legal professionals as dirty money gatekeepers

The institutional problem

chapter 8|14 pages

Occupation, organisation, and opportunity

Theorising the facilitation of money laundering as ‘white-collar crime’

chapter 9|15 pages

New payment systems

Potential counter-terrorist financing risks and the legal response in the United Kingdom

chapter 10|14 pages

The use of cryptocurrencies in the UK real estate market

An assessment of money laundering risks

chapter 11|14 pages

Criminal money and antiquities

An open-source investigation into transnational organised cultural property crime

part III|102 pages

Country-specific insights or rebellion

chapter 12|14 pages

UK corporate corruption

A regulatory paradox

chapter 13|15 pages

Corporate criminal liability and the failure to prevent offence

An argument for the adoption of an omissions-based offence in AML

chapter 14|15 pages

The development of laws in Kuwait to combat corruption

A work in progress

chapter 15|14 pages

Proceeds of corruption crime

The Kuwaiti legal response

chapter 18|14 pages

Iran responds

International counter-terrorism financing framework