Journal of Illicit Economies and Development (Oct 2021)

Comparative Analysis of Illicit Supply Network Structure and Operations: Cocaine, Wildlife, and Sand

  • Nicholas Magliocca,
  • Aurora Torres,
  • Jared Margulies,
  • Kendra McSweeney,
  • Inés Arroyo-Quiroz,
  • Neil Carter,
  • Kevin Curtin,
  • Tara Easter,
  • Meredith Gore,
  • Annette Hübschle,
  • Francis Massé,
  • Aunshul Rege,
  • Elizabeth Tellman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.31389/jied.76
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 1

Abstract

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Illicit supply networks (ISNs) are composed of coordinated human actors that source, transit, and distribute illicitly traded goods to consumers, while also creating widespread social and environmental harms. Despite growing documentation of ISNs and their impacts, efforts to understand and disrupt ISNs remain insufficient due to the persistent lack of knowledge connecting a given ISN’s modus operandi and its patterns of activity in space and time. The core challenge is that the data and knowledge needed to integrate it remain fragmented and/or compartmentalized across disciplines, research groups, and agencies tasked with understanding or monitoring one or a few specific ISNs. One path forward is to conduct comparative analyses of multiple diverse ISNs. We present and apply a conceptual framework for linking ISN modus operandi to spatial-temporal dynamics and patterns of activity. We demonstrate this through a comparative analysis of three ISNs – cocaine, illegally traded wildlife, and illegally mined sand – which range from well-established to emergent, global to domestic in geographic scope, and fully illicit to de facto legal. The proposed framework revealed consistent traits related to geographic price structure, value capture at different supply chain stages, and key differences among ISN structure and operation related to commodity characteristics and their relative illicitness. Despite the diversity of commodities and ISN attributes compared, social and environmental harms inflicted by the illicit activity consistently become more widespread with increasing law enforcement disruption. Drawing on these lessons from diverse ISNs, which varied in their histories and current sophistication, possible changes in the structure and function of nascent and/or low salience ISNs may be anticipated if future conditions or law enforcement pressure change.

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