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E-grāmata: Dirty Assets: Emerging Issues in the Regulation of Criminal and Terrorist Assets

, (University of Leeds, UK)
  • Formāts: 376 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 23-May-2016
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781317150459
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  • Cena: 62,60 €*
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  • Formāts: 376 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 23-May-2016
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781317150459

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Adopting a multi-disciplinary and comparative approach, this book focuses on the emerging and innovative aspects of attempts to target the accumulated assets of those engaged in criminal and terrorist activity, organized crime and corruption. It examines the ’follow-the-money’ approach and explores the nature of criminal, civil and regulatory responses used to attack the financial assets of those engaged in financial crime in order to deter and disrupt future criminal activity as well as terrorism networks. With contributions from leading international academics and practitioners in the fields of law, economics, financial management, criminology, sociology and political science, the book explores law and practice in countries with significant problems and experiences, revealing new insights into these dilemmas. It also discusses the impact of the ’follow-the-money’ approach on human rights while also assessing effectiveness. The book will appeal to academics and researchers of financial crime, organized crime and terrorism as well as practitioners in the police, prosecution, financial and taxation agencies, policy-makers and lawyers.

Recenzijas

'Dirty Assets is a remarkable collection of scientific contributions, which follow the common thread of examining how criminal activities might be countered by putting a stop to illicit financial flows... In conclusion, the volume, which appears written with a clear view of its impact on future directions and developments in the area of criminal assets confiscation and recovery, achieves the goal of offering a brilliant overview of the most relevant measures implemented at both domestic and supranational level in order to interrupt the illicit financial flows that feed criminal and terrorist organisations, enabling them to carry out their criminal activities.'

Costantino Grasso, University of East London, UK, Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology Following the money that funds terror and motivates organised crime is not a new strategy. However, much of what has been done has not had significant results - at least measured in traditional law enforcement terms. We need to learn from those systems that have better disrupted the criminal pipeline and increasingly think of new strategies and devices. This excellent book, edited by two leading scholars in criminal justice, provides in its treasury of experience if not all the answers, certainly some. Anyone concerned with taking the profit out of crime or pursuing terrorists more effectively will not be disappointed. Barry Rider, University of Cambridge, UK '... le parfait manuel de droit comparé pour [ ...] mieux comprendre lapproche follow-the-money ... Louvrage Dirty Assets est sans aucun doute lun des plus riches et des plus intéressants parus en la matičre ces derničres années.' [ '... the perfect comparative law handbook [ ...] to understand the follow-the-money approach ... Dirty Assets is without a doubt one of the most valuable and interesting books published on this topic within the last years.'] Revue de droit pénal et de criminologie

Dirty Assets is a remarkable collection of scientific contributions, which follow the common thread of examining how criminal activities might be countered by putting a stop to illicit financial flows written with a clear view of its impact on future directions and developments in the area of criminal assets confiscation and recovery, [ it] achieves the goal of offering a brilliant overview of the most relevant measures implemented at both domestic and supranational level in order to interrupt the illicit financial flows that feed criminal and terrorist organisations, enabling them to carry out their criminal activities. Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology 0(0) 12

List of Figures
vii
List of Tables
ix
Notes on Contributors xi
PART I INTRODUCTORY MATTERS
1 Emerging Issues in the Regulation of Criminal and Terrorist Assets
3(24)
Colin King
Clive Walker
PART II CRIMINAL AND CIVIL RESPONSES TO ILLICIT ASSETS
2 Confiscation of the Proceeds of Crime: The European Union Framework
27(20)
Matthias J. Borgers
3 Post-Conviction Confiscation of Assets in England and Wales: Rhetoric and Reality
47(24)
Karen Bullock
Stuart Lister
4 Anti-Mafia Forfeiture in the Italian System
71(20)
Daniele Piva
5 Civil Forfeiture of Criminal Assets in Bulgaria
91(24)
Rositsa Dzhekova
6 Criminal Asset Recovery in Australia
115(26)
Andrew Goldsmith
David Gray
Russell G. Smith
7 `Hitting Back' at Organized Crime: The Adoption of Civil Forfeiture in Ireland
141(24)
Colin King
8 Civil Processes and Tainted Assets: Exploring Canadian Models of Forfeiture
165(18)
Michelle Gallant
9 Asset Recovery: Substantive or Symbolic?
183(20)
Jackie Harvey
10 Corruption, the United Nations Convention against Corruption (`UNCAC') and Asset Recovery
203(26)
Indira Carr
Robert Jago
PART III RESPONSES TO THE FINANCING OF TERRORIST ACTIVITY
11 Terrorism Financing and the Policing of Charities: Who Pays the Price?
229(32)
Clive Walker
12 US Efforts to Stem the Flow of Funds to Terrorist Organizations: Export Controls, Financial Sanctions and Material Support
261(30)
Laura K. Donohue
13 Dismantling Terrorist Economics: The Spanish Experience
291(26)
Thomas Baumert
Mikel Buesa
14 EU Counter-Terrorist Sanctions: The Questionable Success Story of Criminal Law in Disguise
317(20)
Christina Eckes
Select Bibliography 337(12)
Index 349
Colin King is Senior Lecturer in Law at the University of Sussex. He is also Academic Fellow at the Honourable Society of the Inner Temple. Prior to joining Sussex, Colin lectured at the Universities of Manchester and Leeds, and was Director of the University of Leeds Innocence Project. He completed his PhD at the University of Limerick, Ireland in 2010. Clive Walker is Professor of Criminal Justice Studies at the School of Law, University of Leeds, where he has served as the Director of the Centre for Criminal Justice Studies (1987-2000) and as Head of School (2000-2005, 2010). He has written extensively on criminal justice issues with a special focus on terrorism issues and also miscarriages of justice, with many publications not only in the UK but also in several other jurisdictions, especially the USA, where he has been a visiting professor at George Washington and Stanford Universities. In 2003, he was a special adviser to the UK Parliamentary select committee which scrutinised what became the Civil Contingencies Act 2004, from which experience he published The Civil Contingencies Act 2004: Risk, Resilience and the Law in the United Kingdom (Oxford University Press, 2006). He has also given evidence to many other Parliamentary and official inquiries, not only in the UK but also in Australia, Canada, and the US. His latest book on terrorism is a comprehensive study of Terrorism and the Law (Oxford University Press, 2011) and was supported by an AHRC fellowship. His standing in the field of terrorism laws has resulted in his appointment by the Home Office as a special adviser.