2015
DOI: 10.1093/afraf/adv040
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Maritime piracy business networks and institutions in Africa

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Cited by 19 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…While robust economic figures are hard to come by – even for UN officials working on the ground for this purpose 4 – there are several reasons making it unlikely that there would have been vast differences between their economies. Both regions have a roughly commensurate population size (though Somaliland is probably larger – (UNFPA 2014)), 5 with economies that are predominantly centred on pastoralism, the exchange of services, and the receipt of remittances from members of the diaspora (Hastings & Phillips 2015). Being largely pastoral, the economies of both Puntland and Somaliland would have been fairly equally affected by the nine-year ban that was imposed by Saudi Arabia on Somali livestock exports until late 2009.…”
Section: Comparing Puntland and Somalilandmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…While robust economic figures are hard to come by – even for UN officials working on the ground for this purpose 4 – there are several reasons making it unlikely that there would have been vast differences between their economies. Both regions have a roughly commensurate population size (though Somaliland is probably larger – (UNFPA 2014)), 5 with economies that are predominantly centred on pastoralism, the exchange of services, and the receipt of remittances from members of the diaspora (Hastings & Phillips 2015). Being largely pastoral, the economies of both Puntland and Somaliland would have been fairly equally affected by the nine-year ban that was imposed by Saudi Arabia on Somali livestock exports until late 2009.…”
Section: Comparing Puntland and Somalilandmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…7 Pirates have themselves also sometimes justified their actions in terms of Somalia's institutional weakness, arguing that its lack of a coastguard allowed foreign fishing vessels to encroach on Somali territorial waters and plunder the country's once lucrative fishery stocks. Pirates have routinely reasoned that they were justified in attacking foreign vessels as a way of recovering some of the lost income from fishing, and of defending Somalia's territory (Bueger 2013; Dua 2013; Hastings & Phillips 2015).…”
Section: Somaliland's Institutional Capacitymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Drawing on the extant literature linking elections and criminal violence, we expect that competitive elections threaten to disrupt agreements between pirate groups and local elites. Collusion between pirates and local governing authorities frequently has been identified as essential for the flourishing of pirate organizations since such connections help stabilize the environment in which pirates operate (Hastings 2012;Hastings and Phillips 2015;Murphy 2009;Shortland and Varese 2014). Hastings (2012, p. 689), for example, observes that incidents in the South China Sea essentially disappeared once the Chinese government cracked down on pirate-government collusion.…”
Section: Electoral Competition and Maritime Piracymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…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.Hastings and Phillips (2015, pp. 555-576)…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%