Bryce Tuttle investigates why some U.S. states and not others have become the most secretive incorporation jurisdictions in the world. Through an interest group analysis of the corporate policymaking of two states (Delaware and Nevada) it posits a causal logic behind corporate secrecy in the most secretive U.S. states. It highlights how pro-secrecy interests in the United States have gained control over incorporation policymaking in Delaware and Nevada.
Casey Michel’s report describes how our own USA is the leading supplier in the world of corporate secrecy. Casey travelled to Nevada, South Dakota, Delaware, and elsewhere, hunting down the information found in this report.
Edited by Matthew T. Page and Jodi Vittori, Carnegie, 2020
Dubai is just one of many enablers of global corruption, crime, and illicit financial flows, but addressing the emirate’s role presents anticorruption practitioners, law enforcement agencies, and policymakers with particularly complex challenges.
Jack Blum, Michael Levi, R. Thomas Naylor, and Phil Williams
United Nations Office for Drug and Crime Prevention, 1999
The major money laundering cases coming to light in recent years share a common feature: criminal organizations are making wide use of the opportunities offered by financial havens and offshore centres to launder criminal assets, thereby creating roadblocks to criminal investigations.