SOC ACE Newsletter

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This month’s newsletter includes:

  • New research projects from SOC ACE on understanding state threats, the evolution of the SOC and development agenda and, the role of global trade hubs in smuggling along the ‘New Silk Road.’

  • Latest SOC ACE research on organised crime and human rights and migrant smuggling.

  • News channels in Colombia feature SOC ACE research on extortion in Medellín

  • Early findings from SOC ACE research on organised crime and illegal trade displacement on Eurasia.

  • SOC ACE attends World Bank’s Fragility Forum, UNODC, launch of the new Economic Crime Manifesto 2.0 and more.

New SOC ACE Research

Understanding State Threats


Matthew Redhead (RUSI) is leading new research looking at the escalating trend of state threats, characterised by hostile activities from other states and their proxies. Following on from SOC ACE supported State Threats Taskforce workshops led by RUSI in 2023, where experts from various fields identified the need for a more nuanced definition and understanding of these threats. Redhead's project aims to build a clearer conceptual framework for understanding state threats as well as mapping out their current character, activities, vectors and more. Read more.

Smuggling along the new silk road: The role of Global Trade Hubs


New research, led by Dr Sami Bensassi (University of Birmingham), examines the susceptibility of Global Trade Hubs (GTH) along the new maritime silk road, to being used by international crime organisations and rogue states for smuggling goods, evading sanctions and moving assets. The research focuses on hubs that facilitate trade between Asia and Europe and are characterised by large port infrastructure and trade flows that often surpass states’ GDP levels, and which commonly form part of China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). Through comparative analysis the research aims to uncover the illicit finance risks associated with such GTHs and provide an analytical toolkit for use by policymakers and practitioners, including in the business community, to assess these risks. Read more.

The evolution of SOC and Development: Interactions in policy and practice


Dr Sasha Jesperson is leading new reserach that unpacks the relationship between SOC and development in policy and seeks to identify a roadmap for future work in this area. Initial research questions include exploring the emergence of the relationship between SOC and Development as a policy agenda, tracing its evolution in focus regions, and analysing its implications on a global scale (e.g., UN and OECD). The study seeks to understand the factors driving the evolution of this policy agenda and the underlying interests shaping it. Furthermore, it aims to consider implications for the future policy agenda on SOC and Development. Read more.

Illicit Finance and Russian Foreign Policy: New Dynamics and Linkages


In this current project phase, Professor David Lewis (Exeter University), Dr Tena Prelec (University of Rijeka) and Olivia Allison will explore critical research questions about Russia's evolving illicit financial flows (IFF) and corruption mechanisms. The research will examine the impact of these factors on the changing nature of the Russian regime, Russia’s foreign policy, and Russia’s policies towards Ukraine. It examines the scale and pattern ofIFF and economic crime in Russian-occupied Ukrainian territories and assesses the implications of Russian economic policies on the reintegration and reconstruction of these areas. The project approach leverages innovative methods such as big-data analytics and OSINT to build a unique database on Russian economic crime and IFF in Russian occupied Ukraine, focussing on two interlinked themes: Russia's Occupation and Russia's War Economy. Read more.

IFF Pyramid: Understanding the challenges of countering IFFs.


This research builds on the findings of Tuesday Reitano's Political Won't? Understanding the challenges of countering IFFs and subsequent case studies from Michael McLaggan and Kristina Amerhauser on addressing IFFs in East and Southern Africa, and the Mekong, both looking into the three types of flows that together enable illicit finance: financial flows, trade flows and informal flows. This phase will explore and analyse how responses to these three problems can fit together for a more effective response to IFFs.The project will analyse current responses to these three types of flows in the focal regions, discreetly and if and how they're being integrated. It will then build on these regional foundations, to include the global illicit financial infrastructure. Read more.

SOC ACE Updates

Latest SOC ACE Publications

Upcoming Events

  • SOC ACE researchers are pleased to be leading the Rethinking stabilisation and responding to transnational threats roundtable at the BISA 2024 Conference Whose International Studies? at HyattHotel/Centenary Square, Birmingham on Friday 7th June 2024 at 13:45PM(UK Time). Speakers include Professor Heather Marquette (University ofBirmingham), Dr David Lewis (University of Exeter), Larry Attree (Independent Consultant), Sarah Fares (GI TOC), Aoife J McCullough (LSE), Tom Rodwell (FCDO) and Emily Winterbotham (RUSI).

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SOC ACE research on counter SOC awareness messaging published in Behavioural Public Policy and European Journal of Political Research

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SOC ACE partners with RUSI’s Centre for Finance and Security (CFS) on State Threats Workshop: Perspectives from Germany and the UK