Money Laundering in International Law

Pub Date : 2021-10-27 DOI:10.1093/obo/9780199796953-0233
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Abstract

The international law of money laundering is found in several United Nations (UN) crime suppression treaties, United Nations Security Council (UNSC) resolutions, and a body of soft law, some of which arguably has crystallized as customary norms. Beginning with the 1988 UN Convention against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances (Vienna Convention), states agreed to establish anti-money laundering (AML) measures in their domestic law for drug-related offenses. This was followed by AML measures against organized crime and corruption, respectively, in the 2000 UN Convention against Transnational Organized Crime (Palermo Convention), including its protocols and the 2003 UN Convention against Corruption (Merida Convention). The AML measures include the criminalization of money laundering, powers to freeze and confiscate the proceeds of crime, duties of the private sector to generate financial intelligence, the establishment of financial intelligence units (FIUs), and formal legal cooperation arrangements between states, necessary given the transnational dimension of money laundering. While AML originally covered only property derived from crime, its measures were extended to property used to finance or carry out crimes, most notably for terrorist acts and the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction. Though countries concluded a treaty against terrorist financing in 1999, it was not until after the events of 11 September 2001 that anti-terrorism financing norms, as part of the panoply of AML measures, were diffused around the world by UNSC resolutions. International bodies, including the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), have prepared model laws to assist countries to incorporate AML measures. The Financial Action Task Force (FATF), established in 1989 by the G7 industrialized nations, is the most important and influential body in setting detailed international standards on AML. Through replication of its norms and functions by regional bodies, the FATF’s soft law of AML measures has hardened into near universal domestic AML laws, adopted to signify the integrity of a country’s financial systems. European nations extensively adopted AML measures by treaties and directives, sometimes going beyond FATF recommendations. As AML measures have grown in number and global significance, critical literature has grown, questioning their effectiveness, whether their benefits outweigh their costs, and whether they are justified from the standpoint of principles of criminal liability and human rights law. For more criminological literature, readers may wish to consult the Oxford Bibliographies in Criminology article Money Laundering. Research for this work was fully supported by a grant from the Research Grants Council of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, China (Project No. 17603319). Thanks to Sean Yau and Ting Yin Lau for their research assistance.
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国际法中的洗钱问题
关于洗钱的国际法存在于几个联合国(UN)打击犯罪条约、联合国安理会(UNSC)决议和一系列软法律中,其中一些可以说已经成为习惯规范。从1988年《联合国禁止非法贩运麻醉药品和精神药物公约》(维也纳公约)开始,各国同意在其国内法中针对与毒品有关的犯罪建立反洗钱(AML)措施。随后,在2000年《联合国打击跨国有组织犯罪公约》(巴勒莫公约)及其议定书和2003年《联合国反腐败公约》(梅里达公约)中分别制定了针对有组织犯罪和腐败的“反洗钱”措施。反洗钱措施包括将洗钱定为刑事犯罪,冻结和没收犯罪所得的权力,私营部门提供金融情报的责任,建立金融情报单位(FIUs),以及国家之间正式的法律合作安排,这是洗钱跨国所必需的。虽然《反洗钱法》最初只涵盖来自犯罪的财产,但其措施已扩大到用于资助或实施犯罪的财产,尤其是用于恐怖主义行为和大规模杀伤性武器扩散的财产。尽管各国在1999年就缔结了一项打击恐怖主义融资的条约,但直到2001年9月11日事件发生后,作为一整套“反洗钱”措施的一部分,反恐怖主义融资规范才通过联合国安理会决议在全球范围内传播。包括联合国毒品和犯罪问题办公室(UNODC)在内的国际机构已经制定了示范法,以协助各国纳入“反洗钱”措施。金融行动特别工作组(FATF)于1989年由七国集团(G7)工业化国家成立,是制定反洗钱详细国际标准的最重要和最有影响力的机构。通过地区机构对其规范和职能的复制,FATF关于“反洗钱”措施的软法律已经强化为近乎普遍的国内“反洗钱”法律,被用来表明一个国家金融体系的完整性。欧洲国家通过条约和指令广泛采用“反洗钱”措施,有时甚至超出了FATF的建议。随着“反洗钱”措施在数量和全球意义上的增长,批评文献越来越多,质疑它们的有效性,它们的收益是否大于成本,以及从刑事责任原则和人权法的角度来看,它们是否合理。对于更多的犯罪学文献,读者不妨参考牛津书目中的犯罪学文章洗钱。本研究由中国香港特别行政区研究资助局资助(项目编号:17603319)。感谢Yau和Ting Yin Lau的研究协助。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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