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Poland Counteracting Money Laundering in Central Europe

Poland Counteracting Money Laundering in Central Europe Money laundering is a major problem related to organised crime and especially to its transnational manifestations. Organised crime, which is associated with a continuous inflow of enormous amounts of money, creates the problem of protecting and hiding the money while at the same time taking every precaution possible. Members of organised criminal groups are therefore forced to conduct all kinds of operations of acquisition or transfer of legal rights whose final stage is the ultimate integration of income deriving from illegal sources. Such behaviour, called money laundering, constitutes the roots of organised crime in other words, it is the fundamental basis for the existence of organised crime. That is why, as part of various international initiatives aimed at preventing and counteracting organised crime, particular attention is paid to the issue of trying to limit the scope of money laundering. It is worth adding here that the phenomenon is also associated with crimes especially in the economic and financial area that do not necessarily have to have an organised nature. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Journal of Money Laundering Control Emerald Publishing

Poland Counteracting Money Laundering in Central Europe

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Publisher
Emerald Publishing
Copyright
Copyright © Emerald Group Publishing Limited
ISSN
1368-5201
DOI
10.1108/eb027265
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Money laundering is a major problem related to organised crime and especially to its transnational manifestations. Organised crime, which is associated with a continuous inflow of enormous amounts of money, creates the problem of protecting and hiding the money while at the same time taking every precaution possible. Members of organised criminal groups are therefore forced to conduct all kinds of operations of acquisition or transfer of legal rights whose final stage is the ultimate integration of income deriving from illegal sources. Such behaviour, called money laundering, constitutes the roots of organised crime in other words, it is the fundamental basis for the existence of organised crime. That is why, as part of various international initiatives aimed at preventing and counteracting organised crime, particular attention is paid to the issue of trying to limit the scope of money laundering. It is worth adding here that the phenomenon is also associated with crimes especially in the economic and financial area that do not necessarily have to have an organised nature.

Journal

Journal of Money Laundering ControlEmerald Publishing

Published: Mar 1, 2000

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