AustLII Home | Databases | WorldLII | Search | Feedback

Edited Legal Collections Data

You are here:  AustLII >> Databases >> Edited Legal Collections Data >> 2015 >> [2015] ELECD 1420

Database Search | Name Search | Recent Articles | Noteup | LawCite | Help

Gallant, M. Michelle --- "AML: maintaining the balance between controlling serious crime and human rights" [2015] ELECD 1420; in Rider, Barry (ed), "Research Handbook on International Financial Crime" (Edward Elgar Publishing, 2015) 532

Book Title: Research Handbook on International Financial Crime

Editor(s): Rider, Barry

Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing

ISBN (hard cover): 9781783475780

Section: Chapter 43

Section Title: AML: maintaining the balance between controlling serious crime and human rights

Author(s): Gallant, M. Michelle

Number of pages: 10

Abstract/Description:

Anti-money laundering (AML) regulation is arguably a great protector of rights: the right to be free from the corrosive influence of serious crime, the rights of citizens to the return of property illegally appropriated by dictators, the freedom to rely on the financial system without fear that criminal earnings might induce its collapse or the right of a society to taxation revenues that might otherwise flee jurisdictional boundaries under the guise of laundered funds. In offering a measure of resistance to forces that would undermine civil society, the AML strategy champions the broad shared right to a reasonably stable social order. Axiomatically, to protect the parameters of civil society, AML regulation must, in its own right, adhere to established principles of justice. To suppress serious crime by dismissing rights, fractures the ideal of a civil society and makes those who insist on pursuing the strategy indistinguishable from the very evils they so vehemently desire to control. Canvassing a range of jurisdictions, this chapter explores three recurrent themes of tension between the regulation of criminal finance and rights. The first theme explores conflicts provoked by the reporting requirements of AML law and concepts of privacy or confidentiality. The second deals with interferences that emerge from the merging of the criminal and the civil law, a feature that chiefly relates to the confiscation or forfeiture elements of AML regulation. The third section investigates conflicts between the regulation of terrorist finance and rights.


AustLII: Copyright Policy | Disclaimers | Privacy Policy | Feedback
URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/ELECD/2015/1420.html