Illicit finance and the dark city economy

Rowland Atkinson has been writing about the role of illicit finance in harming everyday communities and people in what he calls the dark city economy.

The dark city economy

In this blog  Rowland discusses the social values that facilitate criminal capital flows, enable crime and violence globally, while denying investment to the social institutions in the city. 

In his article (free to download) Rowland argues that this distinct urban economy, which combines licit and illicit monies, is facilitated by anomic institutional, and political economic, settings. These settings have produced a ‘dark city’ that has generated a series of shadow harms. These harms include the defunding of social institutions, care, and infrastructural decline, such as large losses of public housing. These outcomes can be linked to the morally ambiguous spaces of those institutions that enable illicit financial flows who operate in the areas of finance, law, corporate life, and real estate. Despite the harms of a dark city condition, mirrored in similar cities globally, these stakeholders remain privileged in an urban political economy that continues to validate the aggressive pursuit of enrichment. Using institutional anomie theory in tandem with cutting-edge intelligence on illicit capital flows, the article develops an analysis of the privileging of capital management systems and the continued sidelining of related social harms in the dark city context.

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