ABSTRACT
This book examines the detrimental impact of illicit financial flows on South Africa’s development, political economy, and transformation in the 21st century.
Over the years, illicit financial flows have led to the systematic looting and channelling away of South African resources, yet they are rarely studied by researchers looking to explain the country’s underdevelopment and political economy. This book looks across sectors, showing that illicit financial flows cut across all the key pillars of development, frustrating the betterment of peoples’ lives in South Africa. Investigating the problem from a decolonial perspective, the book delves deep into the catastrophic impacts of illicit financial flows for people and the economy, discusses how the problem is being combatted, and ultimately suggests solutions for rebuilding social trust between people and the state.
Making an important contribution to the decolonial debate, as well as to discussions of South Africa’s political economy, this book will be of interest to researchers across African studies, global development, political science, law and corruption studies.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part 1|146 pages
Illicit financial flows and the political economy of South Africa
chapter 4|13 pages
Illicit trading in the mining sector
chapter 6|15 pages
Illicit financial flows and the marginalised population
chapter 8|16 pages
Civil society and the fight against illicit financial flows in Africa
chapter 9|11 pages
An institutional and public policy response to illicit financial flows in the mining industry of southern Africa
chapter 10|13 pages
Regional economic communities and the fight against corruption in Africa
part 2|98 pages
Illicit financial flows in South Africa: A reading from an Afro-decolonial perspective