Governing Guns,
Preventing Plunder:
International Cooperation against Illicit
Trade
by Asif Efrat (Author)
From human trafficking
to the smuggling of small arms to the looting of antiquities, illicit trade
poses significant threats to international order. So why is it so difficult to
establish international cooperation against illicit trade? Governing Guns,
Preventing Plunder offers a novel, thought-provoking answer to this crucial
question.
Conventional wisdom
holds that criminal groups are the biggest obstacle to efforts to suppress
illicit trade. Contrarily, Asif Efrat explains how legitimate actors, such as
museums that acquire looted antiquities, seek to hinder these regulatory
efforts. Yet such attempts to evade regulation fuel international political
conflicts between governments demanding action against illicit trade and others
that are reluctant to cooperate. The book offers a framework for understanding
the domestic origins of these conflicts and how the distribution of power
shapes their outcome. Through this framework, Efrat explains why the interests
of governments vary across countries, trades, and time. In a fascinating
empirical analysis, he solves a variety of puzzles: Why is the international
regulation of small arms much weaker than international drug control? What led
the United States and Britain to oppose the efforts against the plunder of
antiquities, and why did they ultimately join these efforts? How did American
pressure motivate Israel to tackle sex trafficking? Efrat's findings will
change the way we think about illicit trade, offering valuable insights to
scholars, activists, and policymakers.