The asset forfeiture regime in Malawi and its implications for the combating of money laundering

Doctor Legum - LLD === The international legal framework on money laundering encourages states to put in place effective systems for the identification, freezing, seizure and forfeiture of proceeds and instrumentalities of crime. While the international legal framework obligates countries to adop...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Phillipo, Jean
Other Authors: Fernandez, Lovell
Language:en
Published: University of the Western Cape 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11394/5294
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uwc-oai-etd.uwc.ac.za-11394-52942017-08-02T04:01:17Z The asset forfeiture regime in Malawi and its implications for the combating of money laundering Phillipo, Jean Fernandez, Lovell Asset recovery Civil forfeiture Money laundering Malawi Doctor Legum - LLD The international legal framework on money laundering encourages states to put in place effective systems for the identification, freezing, seizure and forfeiture of proceeds and instrumentalities of crime. While the international legal framework obligates countries to adopt conviction-based forfeiture (criminal forfeiture), it only encourages them to consider adopting non-conviction based asset forfeiture (civil forfeiture). This has led to a situation where countries, such as Malawi, adopt only criminal forfeiture and not civil forfeiture. This study analyses the efficiency of the existing Malawian criminal forfeiture regime in curbing and preventing the proliferation of underlying profit-generating crimes and money laundering. This thesis contends, in part, that some countries have not adopted civil forfeiture because there is no international obligation to do so. It argues that the fact that states are not obligated to adopt civil forfeiture by international legal frameworks and national arrangements undermines the deterrent aim of the anti-money laundering and asset forfeiture systems in combating economic crimes. Some justify the casual approach to civil forfeiture by arguing that its implementation harbours the danger of violating human rights and constitutional guarantees. This thesis, however, advocates for the adoption of civil forfeiture within the limits of John Locke’s social contract theory, which guides states on how they can pursue policies and implement laws without limiting the rights of their people arbitrarily. 2016-10-27T13:51:12Z 2016-10-27T13:51:12Z 2015 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/11394/5294 en University of the Western Cape University of the Western Cape
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Asset recovery
Civil forfeiture
Money laundering
Malawi
spellingShingle Asset recovery
Civil forfeiture
Money laundering
Malawi
Phillipo, Jean
The asset forfeiture regime in Malawi and its implications for the combating of money laundering
description Doctor Legum - LLD === The international legal framework on money laundering encourages states to put in place effective systems for the identification, freezing, seizure and forfeiture of proceeds and instrumentalities of crime. While the international legal framework obligates countries to adopt conviction-based forfeiture (criminal forfeiture), it only encourages them to consider adopting non-conviction based asset forfeiture (civil forfeiture). This has led to a situation where countries, such as Malawi, adopt only criminal forfeiture and not civil forfeiture. This study analyses the efficiency of the existing Malawian criminal forfeiture regime in curbing and preventing the proliferation of underlying profit-generating crimes and money laundering. This thesis contends, in part, that some countries have not adopted civil forfeiture because there is no international obligation to do so. It argues that the fact that states are not obligated to adopt civil forfeiture by international legal frameworks and national arrangements undermines the deterrent aim of the anti-money laundering and asset forfeiture systems in combating economic crimes. Some justify the casual approach to civil forfeiture by arguing that its implementation harbours the danger of violating human rights and constitutional guarantees. This thesis, however, advocates for the adoption of civil forfeiture within the limits of John Locke’s social contract theory, which guides states on how they can pursue policies and implement laws without limiting the rights of their people arbitrarily.
author2 Fernandez, Lovell
author_facet Fernandez, Lovell
Phillipo, Jean
author Phillipo, Jean
author_sort Phillipo, Jean
title The asset forfeiture regime in Malawi and its implications for the combating of money laundering
title_short The asset forfeiture regime in Malawi and its implications for the combating of money laundering
title_full The asset forfeiture regime in Malawi and its implications for the combating of money laundering
title_fullStr The asset forfeiture regime in Malawi and its implications for the combating of money laundering
title_full_unstemmed The asset forfeiture regime in Malawi and its implications for the combating of money laundering
title_sort asset forfeiture regime in malawi and its implications for the combating of money laundering
publisher University of the Western Cape
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/11394/5294
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