The State as Victim and Beneficiary of Illicit Flows

By Jonathan Kelman, on , Feature

While transnational illicit flows of people, goods and technology are not a new phenomenon, it has been widely recognized that the volume of these flows has increased dramatically in the globalizing era that has followed the end of the Cold War. This increase has largely been a result of the technical innovations associated with globalization, combined with the popularization of "free trade" ideals. Simply put, the sheer volume of international trade has meant that even states of the developed world increasingly cannot control their borders. What effect has this increase in illicit flows had on states and their power in the international system? Though illicit flows are still an emerging area of study, some themes have already begun to take shape in the proposed answers to this question.

The dominant perspective, as espoused by law enforcement authorities, most policymakers and many academics, is that illicit flows empower nonstate actors at the expense of states. According to this view, illicit flows erode state legitimacy and security. For one, the territorial nature of state power is inherently challenged by unauthorized disregard of state borders. Meanwhile, illicit flows and the private organizations that feed on them often threaten state security, both physically as well as financially. Nonstate actors -- such as transnational criminal organizations (TCOs), terrorist networks and insurgent groups -- often profit from the illicit movement of people and goods and can use these profits to finance challenges to the alleged state monopoly on violence. By facilitating such efforts, as well as by allowing nonstate actors to provide other traditional state services, illicit flows further detract from the legitimacy of states -- with states of the developing world particularly vulnerable to their effects. ...

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