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E-grāmata: Money Laundering Blacklists

(Universitą Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Italy)
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"What are the criteria used by FATF and the European Union to blacklist jurisdictions at high-risk of money laundering? What are the countries at highest risk according to Panama Papers and FinCEN files? Where do criminals move their illicit money, according to judicial and investigative evidence? This book answers these questions. It is an unprecedented study on the countries at highest risk of attracting money laundering and organised crime proceeds - and how they are identified as such by scholars, policy-makers and AML practitioners. It targets an issue which is central to the policy debate, in the media, but is under-studied. The book is divided into two parts. Part I discusses the concept of money laundering risk, its main determinants, and carriesout a review of extant country ratings, ranging from official blacklists and grey lists, to media leaks and scholarly papers. Part II discusses the weaknesses and the myths behind the current ratings, and proposes a new approach to assess the risk of money laundering across countries. With a critical research perspective, empirically-driven, this book aims to satisfy both scholars and students - in particular from criminology, economics and international relations - and practitioners from banks, professional firms, AML authorities"--

This book is an unprecedented study on the countries at highest risk of attracting money laundering and organised crime proceeds. It aims to satisfy both scholars and students in particular from criminology, economics and international relations, and practitioners from banks, professional firms, AML authorities.

Recenzijas

"For too long, for money laundering and the policies to counter it have been 'an evidence-free zone', with lots of politics, hypocrisy and guess-work covering our enormous ignorance. Riccardi's book is a huge step forward in fixing this sad state of affairs. Money Laundering Blacklists takes an original, rigorous approach in transforming our understanding of where the real risks of dirty money lie, and how the fight against illicit finance should be re-focused. It's rare that a book can be so important and compelling for both scholars and policy-makers, but Riccardi has achieved this rare feat".

Jason Sharman, Sir Patrick Sheehy Professor of International Relations University of Cambridge

"For a nation to be blacklisted for anything is troubling. To be blacklisted for an activity as apparently serious as failure to control money laundering is deeply troubling. Yet, Michele Riccardi's scholarly but very readable book shows that the label is usually applied by official bodies in an arbitrary and unhelpful way. Riccardi offers a theoretically informed empirical approach to testing whether a country truly belongs on a money laundering blacklist".

Peter Reuter, Distinguished Professor of Public Policy and Criminology at the University of Maryland

"This book reminds us that the current state of the art on assessing national anti-money laundering risk is woefully insufficient. It usefully proposes defining AML risk from the perspective of the viewing country and dispenses with the canard that small and poor countries are the main AML problem, when in fact large, rich countries hold the lions share of the worlds dirty money".

Charles W Littrell, Inspector of Banks and Trust Companies, Central Bank of The Bahamas

"With money laundering risk assessments increasingly seen as the cornerstone of an effective framework to tackle financial crime, this book provides a timely analysis of existing blacklists and approaches to measure risks. It challenges and demystifies many of the methods while offering concrete and promising solutions to assess money laundering risks, taking into account how criminals move dirty money across borders and the role of both source and destination countries".

Maķra Martini, Leader of AML and Beneficial Ownership research & policy, Transparency International

List of figures
ix
List of tables
xi
Acknowledgements xiii
List of abbreviations
xiv
Introduction 1(8)
PART I Money laundering risk measures
9(92)
1 Money laundering risk and determinants
11(32)
1.1 Money laundering (and illicit financial flows)
11(2)
1.2 Money laundering risk
13(9)
1.3 Determinants of money laundering risk across countries: proximity, opacity, and security
22(14)
1.4 Available measures of money laundering risk
36(7)
2 Money laundering blacklists and grey lists
43(25)
2.1 Origin and scope of anti-money laundering blacklists
43(1)
2.2 The FATF blacklist and grey list
44(11)
2.3 The USINCSR list
55(4)
2.4 The European Union anti-money laundering blacklist
59(4)
2.5 Blacklists and sanctions
63(5)
3 Other lists of high-risk countries
68(33)
3.1 Lists based on judicial investigations
68(3)
3.2 Lists based on media investigations:from Panama Papers to FinCEN files
71(5)
3.3 Lists based on financial/corporate data analyses
76(4)
3.4 Lists based on crime data analyses
80(4)
3.5 Composite indicators
84(5)
3.6 Lists developed by banks and other obliged entities
89(2)
3.7 Relations and underlying components of existing risk ratings
91(5)
3.8 Summary: the gaps in existing risk ratings and blacklists
96(5)
PART II A new measurement approach
101(37)
4 A new approach to identify countries at high-risk of money laundering
103(23)
4.1 Rationale
103(1)
4.2 Methodology and operationalisation
104(8)
4.3 A practical application: money laundering risk from the perspective of Italy
112(14)
5 Discussion and policy implications
126(12)
5.1 Discussion
126(8)
5.2 Policy implications
134(2)
5.3 Limitations and future research directions
136(2)
Appendix 138(12)
References 150(15)
Index 165
Michele Riccardi is Deputy Director at Transcrime and Adjunct Professor at Universitą Cattolica and University of Palermo (Itlay). He has coordinated numerous research projects and publications in the field of money laundering, organised crime, and financial crime. In this domain, he has been consultant for the United Nations, the European Commission, World Bank, and the Italian government.