Policy briefs
26 October 2012
Transnational organised crime and fragile states
creative commons/Flickr/UN photo
This brief seeks to explain the fundamental errors and misconceptions which ensure that the fight against global crime, while scoring ever more arrests and interdictions, has failed to make headway against trafficking through fragile states. It concludes by listing a series of new policy areas that could
underpin a new approach. Above all, these emphasize reducing the receptivity
of fragile states to criminal enterprise, staunching violence, and ensuring the
gradual build-up of trust, probity and clean business.