ILLICIT FINANCIAL FLOWS
ILLICIT FINANCIAL FLOWS collection
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Titre: Africa Could Gain $89 Billion Annually by Curbing Illicit financial Flows
Date published: 2020
Éditeur: UN -
Titre: Africa loses $50 billion every year
Date published: 2013
Éditeur: United Nations Department of Public Information -
Titre: Digitizing Africa, the Key to Stronger Institutions: Good Governance and Strong Institutions Enhance a Country’s Ability to Mobilize Domestic Resources through Revenue Collection
Date published: 2022
Éditeur: UN -
Titre: Domestic Desource Mobilization: Fighting Against corruption and Illicit Financial Flows
Date published: 2019
Éditeur: African Union -
Titre: Illicit Financial Flows from Africa
Date published: 2013
Éditeur: United Nations Department of Public Information -
Titre: Indirect Rule Redux: The Political Economy of Diamond Mining and Its Relation to the Ebola Outbreak in Kono District, Sierra Leone
Date published: 2018
Éditeur: Taylor & Francis Group -
Titre: Tackling Illicit Financial Flows to Secure Africa's Future, Curb Conflict: Annual US$88.6 Billion Illicit Capital Flight Loss Needs to be Seen as Missed Development Opportunities
Date published: 2021
Éditeur: UN -
Titre: Tackling Illicit Financial Flows, a Matter Of Survival Forafrica's Development: Addressing Iffs Requires Tackling Imbalance in the International Financial and Trade Systems, and Confronting Weakinstitutions
Date published: 2021
Éditeur: UN