scholarly journals Money Laundering Amidst Mortars: Legislative Process and State Authority in Post-Invasion Iraq

Author(s):  
Haider Ala Hamoudi

16 Transnational Law and Contemporary Problems 523 (2007)There existed a substantial divergence between the Coalition Provisional Authority, the U.S. and U.K. run entity responsible for governing Iraq after the fall of the Saddam Hussein regime, and the Iraqi body politic over the most fundamental assumptions and biases underlying political and economic forms of human association. This made effective governance by the CPA an impossible proposition. The disparate assumptions and biases in question related to the relationship of state authority and law to alternative religious and culturally based sources of authority. Specifically, the dominant Iraqi assumption is that religious institutions of authority, and in particular, the powerful Shi'i religious institution known as the marja'iyya, are not political, and that therefore matters that should be governed by religious authority are to be administered largely by elements operating beyond state control. Any prescriptive approach to legal change in Iraq requires an understanding of this central fact. The Article attempts to demonstrate this thesis with reference to a CPA order concerning money laundering whose terms the author participated in negotiating. In this example, the Iraqi presuppositions and biases manifested themselves in objections to CPA proposals regarding preferred modalities of regulation and enforcement, with regulatory exemptions sought for particular commercial actors over whom it was assumed that alternative, non state based forms of authority were more appropriate. The Article proposes a solution to this problem through a paradigm shift in the understanding of certain religious prohibitions on commercial activity, which could lead to a more salutary regulatory regime that harmonizes both state and religious forms of authority.

2019 ◽  
pp. 106591291986650
Author(s):  
James M. Glaser ◽  
Jeffrey M. Berry ◽  
Deborah J. Schildkraut

“Education,” notes Philip Converse, “is everywhere the universal solvent.” Whatever the ill of the body politic, many believe that greater education improves the condition. Much scholarship explores the impact of education on political attitudes and behaviors, but scholars have not examined the relationship of education to support for political compromise. This is especially topical, as compromise between parties seems harder than ever to achieve, yet compromise is necessary for democratic governance. We examine whether higher levels of education lead to support for compromise and find that education does matter, but the relationship is conditional. For liberals and moderates, more education promotes greater support for compromise. For conservatives, those with more education are not more likely to support compromise than those with less education. We argue that for conservatives, education matters for compromise support, but it also leads to better understanding of bedrock ideological principles that inhibit approval of compromise.


2017 ◽  
Vol 38 (2) ◽  
pp. 191-220
Author(s):  
Vincent Arel-Bundock ◽  
Srinivas Parinandi

AbstractCross-border commercial activity raises issues in federations where multiple jurisdictions can claim the right to tax the same income. In the United States, this coordination problem is resolved by splitting the tax base according to the geographic distribution of firms’ sales, capital and labour. The weight of each factor is determined on a state-by-state basis, which opens room for competitive legislative behaviour. In this complex issue area, however, policymakers must invest lot of resources to monitor competitors, evaluate policy alternatives and shepherd tax reform through the legislative process. This implies that highly professional legislatures should be more responsive to the policies of nearby states. We consider data on most American states over the period from 1986 to 2013 and find strong evidence of conditional spatial dependence. Our findings suggest that policy diffusion may often be moderated by institutional and political factors.


2020 ◽  
Vol 100 ◽  
pp. 109-140
Author(s):  
Eljas Oksanen ◽  
Michael Lewis

This paper explores some 220,000 medieval objects recorded in the Portable Antiquities Scheme (PAS) online database of archaeological small finds through Geographic Information System analysis of their relationship with contemporary market sites. First, an overview of the contents of the PAS database is presented in terms of its spatial and ‘object type’ distribution. Second, the relationship of the medieval finds data against documentary evidence of commercial activity is investigated at a national level. Finally, PAS data is contextualised in its historical landscape context through case studies. It is argued that the distribution of PAS finds on the national scale can be linked with patterns of commercial activity, and that while rural and urban finds scatters have distinguishing trends, the countryside population enjoyed access to a range of sophisticated metalwork culture; also, that certain assemblages can be analysed statistically to yield new data and perspectives on local historical development.


Author(s):  
Annabel S. Brett

This chapter discusses the relationship of the state to its subjects as necessarily physically embodied beings. The primary way in which the commonwealth commands its subjects is through the medium of its law. The law is for the common good and obliges the community as a whole, and thus the ontological status of the law—as distinct from any particular command of a superior to an individual—is intimately tied to that of the body politic. The question, then, concerning the relationship of the state to the natural body of the individual can be framed in terms of the extent of the obligation of the civil law.


2002 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
pp. 35-45
Author(s):  
Francis E. McGovern

There is virtually universal acceptance for the proposition that political questions in the United States have a propensity to morph into judicial questions. The use of litigation as a method of governing the body politic has repeatedly manifested itself since the formation of our nation. Congress vs. the legislature; federal vs. state authority; voting rights; civil rights; universal rights — the list is pervasive.


2016 ◽  
Vol 9 (5) ◽  
pp. 257 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ghafoor Khoyini ◽  
Hamid Masjed Sarayi ◽  
Soheil Kabiri

<p>Money laundering or money laundering is a set of operations which transform the illegitimate and illegal property to legitimate and legal property and This phenomenon is one of transnational organized crime that has detrimental effect and impacts on the local and international level in the fields of social, political, economic and security and for this reason, many international conventions including the Vienna and the Palermo Convention have stressed to criminalize and combat it and in domestic law to combat money laundering as a crime have been considered by the law. In Jurisprudence (figh) there are verses, traditions and legal rules, which demonstrate criminalization of this phenomenon; this paper, in detail discussed this Jurisprudence reasons; as well as relationship of money laundering with Khums(one-fifth) of lawful property mixed with forbidden money and conflict of Criminalization of money laundering with some important Islamic legal principles such as The presumption of ownership and Possession of owner to his property have been pointed and investigated. So this study, analyzed the Jurisprudence foundations of the money laundering case and the prohibition of it has been concluded.</p>


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vincent Arel-Bundock ◽  
Srinivas Parinandi

Cross-border commercial activity raises issues in federations where multiple jurisdictions can claim the right to tax the same income. In the United States, this coordination problem is resolved by splitting the tax base according to the geographic distribution of firms’ sales, capital and labour. The weight of each factor is determined on a state-by-state basis, which opens room for competitive legislative behaviour. In this complex issue area, however, policymakers must invest lot of resources to monitor competitors, evaluate policy alternatives and shepherd tax reform through the legislative process. This implies that highly professional legislatures should be more responsive to the policies of nearby states. We consider data on most American states over the period from 1986 to 2013 and find strong evidence of conditional spatial dependence. Our findings suggest that policy diffusion may often be moderated by institutional and political factors.


2015 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 156
Author(s):  
Rafael Costa Freiria

<p><strong>Resumo:</strong> O artigo tem como objetivo apresentar a análise histórica das principais legislações federais brasileiras que regulamentaram e regulamentam a relação do homem com o território e o meio ambiente que o integra. Entende-se que referida investigação possibilita aprimorar o conhecimento do processo de construção do Direito e das Políticas Ambientais no Brasil. A partir da concepção histórica desse processo de desenvolvimento da legislação ambiental brasileira, como um produto provisório e que se encontra em permanente transformação, conforme os objetivos do Estado e da sociedade em cada período, abre-se a possibilidade para diagnósticos das origens normativas, espaciais, sociais, econômicas e ambientais que permeiam o processo legislativo, bem como propor alternativas para maior efetividade dos objetivos jurídico-institucionais dos comandos normativos analisados. Sendo, portanto, a leitura histórica da formação da legislação ambiental brasileira utilizada como ponto de partida para se pensar e propor alternativas no sentido de aprimorar a relação presente e futura do homem com o território.</p><p><strong>Palavras chave:</strong> Direito ambiental; História da Legislação Ambiental; Política ambiental.</p><p><strong>Abstract:</strong> The article aims to present a historical analysis of the main Brazilian federal laws that regulated and regulate man's relationship with the territory and the environment that it integrates. It is understood that such research enables to improve the knowledge of the construction process of the Law and Environmental Policies in Brazil. From the conception of this historical development of the Brazilian environmental legislation process as an interim product that is constantly changing, according to the aims State and society in each period, it opens the possibility for diagnosis of normative sources, spatial social, economic and environmental factors that permeate the legislative process, as well as to propose alternatives for greater effectiveness of legal and institutional goals of normative commands analyzed. And therefore, the historical reading of the formation of the Brazilian environmental legislation used as a starting point for thinking and proposing alternatives in order to improve the present and future relationship of man with the territory.</p><p><strong>Keywords:</strong> Environmental Law; History of Environmental Legislation; Environmental Policy.</p>


2021 ◽  
Vol 26 (1) ◽  
pp. 21-33
Author(s):  
Mile Šikman ◽  
Miloš Grujić

Money laundering has a direct impact, among other things, on the economic development of a country. The aim of this research is to determine the correlation between money laundering and economic development expressed through GDP, as well as between financial market development (FDI) and the Human Development Index (HDI). The results of the research show that there was a significant relationship between the observed variables, i.e. that there is a relation of the Anti-Money Laundering Index (AMLI) on GDP, financial market development and the HDI. Namely, given that medium-strong links between the observed variables have been established, it can be claimed that there is reason to believe that "copying the behaviour" of a certain country in the fight against money laundering can further develop the financial market, influence human development or an increase in GDP per capita. In particular, a decrease in the AMLI was expected to increase the FDI (R2 = 0.2601). A decrease in the AMLI was expected to increase the HDI (R2 = 0.5747). In that way, financial institutions are directly affected, which negatively relates to economic and political stability.


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