ID | 152713 |
Title Proper | Oil-Fueled insurgencies |
Other Title Information | lootable wealth and political order in Syria, Iraq, and Nigeria |
Language | ENG |
Author | Ocakli, Feryaz ; Scotch, Matthew |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | What makes oil a lootable resource? We explore the conditions under which oil rents accrue to violent nonstate actors by disaggregating the oil supply chain. We argue that territorial control by states and insurgent groups shapes how oil is looted. It is more likely to be looted at the extraction and refinement phases in insurgent-controlled zones. In zones that are contested between the state and insurgents, oil is more likely to be looted at the transportation phase. Oil looting is rare in state-controlled zones, but never fully eradicated. Corporate and government corruption reduces risk for looters and enables the expansion of theft operations. We explore these arguments with a comparative analysis of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria and the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta in Nigeria. |
`In' analytical Note | Journal of Global security Studies Vol. 2, No.1; Jan 2017: p.55-73 |
Journal Source | Journal of Global security Studies Vol: 2 No 1 |
Key Words | Transnational Terrorism ; Civil War Intervention ; GTD ; Terrorism Datasets ; Military Deployments |