New report: 'Tunisia - Growing Irregular Migration Flows Amid Worsening Political Fragility

I'm delighted to announce the publication of my new report, 'Tunisia - Growing Irregular Migration Flows Amid Worsening Political Fragility.’

The report looks at the evolution of human smuggling and trafficking in Tunisia in 2021, as well as assessing the political and economic dynamics with intensified during the year. It ends with a brief look ahead for the second half of 2022.

It can be access here: https://globalinitiative.net/analysis/human-smuggling-trafficking-ecosystems-north-africa-sahel/

New Report: Blessing And Curse: Petroleum profits, control and fragility in Libya.

I'm delighted to announce the publication of my new report, 'Blessing And Curse: Petroleum profits, control and fragility in Libya.’ Written with Emad Badi for the Friedrich Ebert Stiftung, the report looks at how Libya’s petroleum wealth has had both a positive and negative impact on the country's fragility. 

The benefits of oil are well known, with profits from petroleum sales providing citizens and the state with an economic buffer, offsetting the impacts of weak state capacity, chaotic politics and violence. 

However, the central economic importance of petroleum products has also led to negative impacts on fragility. This is not due to one single dimension, but rather a confluence of separate, though often reinforcing, dynamics. Perceptions of unfair resource allocation have led communities in oil and gas producing areas and regions to disrupt production, in order to press for jobs and a more equitable sharing of profits.  Conflict entrepreneurs have transformed the control of oil and gas infrastructure into an economic weapon.  The official entity tasked with protecting infrastructure and ensuring production, the Petroleum Facilities Guard, is a key part of the problem, with field units repeatedly halting production and transport of oil and gas.

The report delves into these dynamics in greater depth and sketches out a synchronized strategy to address them, involving targeted economic development, security sector reform, and national dialogue on resource sharing. 

The report ican be found here: http://library.fes.de/pdf-files/bueros/libyen/19331.pdf

New Article: Breaking the cycle - The GI-TOC addresses extortion at International Migration Review Forum Multistakeholder Hearing.

Extortion is not only a driver of migration but also a pervasive danger faced by migrants on the move, particularly those who use people-smuggling services, and more needs to be done to address the vulnerabilities and structural challenges that underpin these two issues.

In advance of the The International Migration Review Forum, Guillermo Vázquez del Mercado, Alice Fereday, Rupert Horsley, and I delve into the subject in this new article for the Global Initiative against Transnational Organized Crime

The article is available here: https://globalinitiative.net/analysis/international-migration-review-forum-extortion/

New Chapter: Largely fleeting and hardly convergent: Libyas crime-terror nexus

I'm delighted to announce my latest publication: "Largely fleeting and hardly convergent: Libyas crime-terror nexus", authored in collaboration with Mark Micallef.

Since the 2011 revolution, Libya has been a state beset by conflict and fragility. Much of the international community's focus on Libya has been on ramifications of this weakness: terrorism, organized crime, and the risk of a crime-terror nexus. However, despite international concerns and ample opportunity for a nexus to emerge in Libya between terrorist organizations and criminal groups, the striking feature of the post revolution years has been the general paucity of engagement between the two types of actors. ISIS attempts in Sirte to profiteer from criminals failed, in part because the group's limited geographic footprint was easily circumventable by criminal actors. In Sabratha, contrasting incentives between ISIS and criminal groups, and the military power of the criminals, enabled the expulsion of the terrorists. In southern Libya, in contrast, AQIM has endured by pursuing a low-key approach, which accommodated local communities and armed groups. The cases presented underscore that Libya, saturated as it is with well-armed actors that depend on the black economy for their funding, is a difficult context to access for foreign terrorist organizations seeking to profit from the country's illicit economy.

The chapter is available here, though it is behind a paywall: https://www.elgaronline.com/view/edcoll/9781788979290/9781788979290.00023.xml