Lexington Books
Pages: 214
Trim: 6⅜ x 9½
978-0-7391-2388-1 • Hardback • August 2008 • $120.00 • (£92.00)
MIchaelene D. Cox is assistant professor of politics and government at Illinois State University.
Chapter 1 Table of Contents
Chapter 2 Preface
Part 3 I. Political Corruption and Global Violence
Chapter 4 1. A Primer in Political Pathologies: Corruption and its Correlates
Chapter 5 2. Globalization and Narcoterrorism
Chapter 6 3. Democray and Non-State Armed Groups
Chapter 7 4. The Illicit Small Arms Trade: Global Threat and Response
Chapter 8 5. Legal Money with an Illegal Past: The Un-Challenged Legal Power of the New Terror Economy in a Globalized World
Part 9 II. Case Studies in Corruption and Violence
Chapter 10 6. Beyond the North-South Divide: A Multi-Pronged Approach to Transnational Criminal Networks in Latin America and the Caribbean
Chapter 11 7. Corruption's Corrosive Effect on Counterinsurgency: The Free Aceh Movement in Southeast Asia
Chapter 12 8. Political Corruption and Violence in Africa
Chapter 13 9. Microfinancing Terrorism: A Study in al Qaeda Financing Strategy
Chapter 14 10. Political Malfeasance and Separatist Conflicts: How Corruption Encourages Violence in Abkhazia and South Ossetia
Chapter 15 About the Contributors
Michaelene Cox and her contributors cast a broad net, offering a book that is policy-relevant and theoretically-conscious. The volume offers a multifaceted, multi-layered examination of relationships among questionable or illegal political and economic activity, inadequate governmental capacity, forceful contention, and illegitimate domination. The chapters invite the reader to assess the adequacy of some national and international policies framed to deal with such problems as well as to consider more carefully the nature of statehood. This collection should find a broad audience.
— Barbara A. Chotiner, University of Alabama
This is a very comprehensive book that links corruption and conflict. It sheds new light on a topic which many have pointed to as important, but few have investigated empirically or systematically. This book, which has contributions from a good mix of junior and senior scholars, provides new insights from a variety of different points of view, and contributes greatly to our understanding of corruption and political conflict in the world.
— John Ishiyama, University of North Texas