ID | 141478 |
Title Proper | Maritime piracy business networks and institutions in Africa |
Language | ENG |
Author | Hastings, Justin V ; Phillips, Sarah G |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | The two regions with the greatest incidence of maritime piracy in Africa, the Horn of Africa and the Gulf of Guinea, are also known for the low quality of the institutions underlying their political economies. This article investigates how institutions in these areas shape and constrain the sophisticated maritime piracy syndicates and their behaviour. Engaging with the literature on state failure and maritime piracy, we argue that norms and institutions constrain even criminal organizations like piracy groups, which often mimic and are embedded in the licit economy. In the Horn of Africa, pirates take structural and ideational cues from the licit economy and are constrained by the informal regulations that govern clan groups, rent-based economic activities, and collective security arrangements in Somalia. In West Africa, sophisticated piracy both preys upon and arises from the formal economy, specifically the international oil industry. As a result, piracy networks often mirror and draw from both the formal institutions in Nigeria used to regulate and protect oil production, and those engaged in oil production, processing, distribution, and transportation. |
`In' analytical Note | African Affairs Vol. 114, No.457; Oct 2015: p.555-576 |
Journal Source | African Affairs Vol: 114 No 457 |
Key Words | Institutions ; Africa ; Maritime Piracy ; Business Networks ; Political Economies ; Maritime Piracy in Africa ; Sophisticated Maritime Piracy Syndicates ; State Failure and Maritime Piracy |