Available Formats
Terrorist Criminal Enterprises: Financing Terrorism through Organized Crime
By (Author) Kimberley L. Thachuk
Foreword by Christopher A. Kojm
Edited by Rollie Lal
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
15th June 2018
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Warfare and defence
Police and security services
363.325
Hardback
232
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
539g
This cohesive set of case studies collects scholarly research, policy evaluation, and field experience to explain how terrorist groups have developed into criminal enterprises. Terrorist groups have evolved from orthodox global insurgents funded by rogue sponsors into nimble and profitable transnational criminal enterprises whose motivations are not always evident. This volume seeks to explain how and why terrorist groups are often now criminal enterprises through 12 case studies of terrorist criminal enterprises written by authors who have derived their expertise on terrorism and/or organized crime from diverse sources. Terrorist groups have been chosen from different regions to provide the global coverage. Chapters describe and analyze the actors, actions, problems, and collaborations of specific terrorist criminal enterprises. Other elements discussed include links to such facilitating conditions as political culture, corruption, history, economy, and issues of governance. This work advances scholarship in the field of counterterrorism by expanding the understanding of these terrorist groups as entities not driven purely by ideology but rather by the criminal enterprises with which they often coincide.
Intriguing and compelling. . . . Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty. * Choice *
Kimberley L. Thachuk, PhD, is senior analyst and educator focusing on transnational security issues. She currently teaches at both George Washington University and Johns Hopkins University. Rollie Lal, PhD, is professorial lecturer at the Elliott School of International Affairs at George Washington University, where she teaches graduate courses on Transnational Threats and International Political Economy.