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Following the Money: Illicit Financial Flows and Sustainable Development Goal 16.4

The Emerald Handbook of Crime, Justice and Sustainable Development

ISBN: 978-1-78769-356-2, eISBN: 978-1-78769-355-5

Publication date: 18 November 2020

Abstract

Sustainable development and the enhancement of justice and security globally are predicated on the existence of sufficient and appropriately deployed assets. Mindful of this, and of the misuse of both public and private wealth, UN Sustainable Development Goal 16.4 (SDG 16.4) seeks to ‘…significantly reduce illicit financial … flows’. This chapter critiques how this aim of SDG 16.4 has been operationalised. We argue that the choice and placement of the term ‘illicit’ is crucial: it can relate to the finances, the flows, or both, as well as to the people involved, as facilitators or protagonists, and is expansive enough to encompass criminal, unlawful and ostensibly legal but illegitimate or harmful assets, acts and actors. Moreover, this chapter explores why the movement of assets is significant, within and between jurisdictions, and how these transfers and transactions impact on sustainable development and can worsen inequalities. Our attention is on the conceptualisation, measurement and operationalisation of illicit financial flows (IFFs) in particular and the corresponding implications for available policy responses in the form of situational interventions as a more plausible route to understanding and reducing IFFs in the context of promoting SDG 16.4.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Acknowledgements

Thanks to Heather Marquette and Jarrett Blaustein for thorough and insightful comments on earlier drafts. Any errors are our own.

Citation

Campbell, L. and Lord, N. (2020), "Following the Money: Illicit Financial Flows and Sustainable Development Goal 16.4", Blaustein, J., Fitz-Gibbon, K., Pino, N.W. and White, R. (Ed.) The Emerald Handbook of Crime, Justice and Sustainable Development, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 355-377. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-78769-355-520201020

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2021 Liz Campbell and Nicholas Lord