The Rise of Kleptocracy: Laundering Cash, Whitewashing Reputations
To safeguard their ill-gotten gains, kleptocrats rely on a web of transnational relationships and the complicity of Western fixers.
Read the EssayA new report by Ben Judah analyzes how the counter-kleptocracy agenda intersects with, and is at times superseded by, competing geopolitical priorities.
READ MOREJ.R. Mailey and Andrea Ngombet highlight ways in which global authoritarian powers, Russia and China, provide surge capacity to kleptocratic networks in Africa.
Read the ReportMatthew T. Page and Jodi Vittori argue that kleptocracy must figure more prominently in democracies’ foreign and domestic policymaking strategies.
Read the ReportDemocracies must develop a unified response to the challenge of transnational kleptocracy by focusing on shared fundamental values, like independent judicial systems and freedom of expression.
Read the ReportA collection of essays illuminates the challenge of reputation laundering by kleptocratic regimes and oligarchs, and offers recommendations for countering its corrosive effects on democratic institutions.
Read the ReportUniversities and think tanks in open societies are prime targets for kleptocrats seeking to launder their reputations, as well as their cash.
Read the ReportA collection of essays assesses the intersection between COVID-19 and transnational kleptocracy from the perspective of civil society, journalists, and researchers.
Read the ReportTransnational kleptocracy is the process by which corrupt rulers steal from the public purse and launder their illicit gains in the international financial system. These stolen resources are parked in outside jurisdictions—often democracies—where strong rule-of-law norms protect kleptocrats’ money and whose professionals enable the theft.
But kleptocracy is about much more than illicit financial flows. Kleptocrats use stolen money to target activists, destroy human rights, and undermine democracy. The efforts of frontline civil society activists and journalists are critical for responding to kleptocracy’s foundational threat to democracy.
View More WorkTo safeguard their ill-gotten gains, kleptocrats rely on a web of transnational relationships and the complicity of Western fixers.
Read the EssayStefanie Ostfeld is a senior program officer at the National Endowment for Democracy's International Forum for Democratic Studies, where she manages the combating transnational kleptocracy portfolio.
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