El crimen organizado estatal y sus implicaciones financieras en la comisión de crímenes internacionales
Loading...
Official URL
Full text at PDC
Publication date
2025
Advisors (or tutors)
Editors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Tirant lo Blanch
Citation
Abstract
Este libro desarrolla un análisis sistemático del crimen organizado estatal como fenómeno en el que redes criminales se incrustan en estructuras públicas y utilizan recursos, capacidades e inmunidades institucionales para facilitar actividades ilícitas, incluyendo corrupción, lavado de activos y otras economías criminales. A partir de un enfoque de Derecho Internacional Público y sus vertientes (en particular, el Derecho Internacional Penal, el Derecho Internacional de los Derechos Humanos y el Derecho Penal Transnacional), la obra identifica rasgos estructurales del fenómeno, sus condiciones de aparición (Estados débiles/fallidos, capturas institucionales, instrumentalización de fuerzas de seguridad), y su proyección internacional mediante redes transfronterizas. Un eje central es el estudio de las implicaciones financieras: flujos ilícitos, encubrimiento patrimonial, y la importancia de las investigaciones financieras para la atribución de responsabilidades y la recuperación de activos. En sus capítulos finales, el libro vincula estas dinámicas con la comisión de crímenes internacionales y examina los desafíos de responsabilidad del Estado y de los individuos, subrayando obstáculos prácticos de cooperación y rendición de cuentas cuando el propio aparato estatal se convierte en facilitador o protagonista de la criminalidad.
This book offers a structured account of state-organized crime as a phenomenon in which criminal networks become embedded within public institutions, leveraging state resources, authority, and institutional protections to enable illicit activities, including corruption, money laundering, and broader criminal economies. From a public international law perspective—drawing in particular on international criminal law, international human rights law, and transnational criminal law—the work identifies core features and enabling conditions (institutional capture, weak/failed-state dynamics, security-sector instrumentalization), and maps its transnational reach through cross-border networks. A key contribution lies in its focus on financial implications: illicit flows, asset concealment, and the role of financial investigations for accountability and asset recovery. The final chapters connect these dynamics to the perpetration of international crimes and address challenges of responsibility for both states and individuals, emphasizing the practical obstacles to enforcement when state structures themselves participate in or shield criminality.
This book offers a structured account of state-organized crime as a phenomenon in which criminal networks become embedded within public institutions, leveraging state resources, authority, and institutional protections to enable illicit activities, including corruption, money laundering, and broader criminal economies. From a public international law perspective—drawing in particular on international criminal law, international human rights law, and transnational criminal law—the work identifies core features and enabling conditions (institutional capture, weak/failed-state dynamics, security-sector instrumentalization), and maps its transnational reach through cross-border networks. A key contribution lies in its focus on financial implications: illicit flows, asset concealment, and the role of financial investigations for accountability and asset recovery. The final chapters connect these dynamics to the perpetration of international crimes and address challenges of responsibility for both states and individuals, emphasizing the practical obstacles to enforcement when state structures themselves participate in or shield criminality.








