Money Laundering

1757 Words4 Pages

A database can be defined as an ‘electronic collection of records including references to journal articles, reports, book chapters or conference papers amongst many other sources of information’. In this sense, databases such as IHS Jane’s Information Group constitute valuable research tools in specific areas of investigation like international crime. In fact, Jane’s Information Group is an ‘open source intelligence gathering, reporting and analysis provider’ which focuses its products in sensitive areas of global interests such as defence, security, law enforcement, public safety, and transport. This essay will evaluate the validity of IHS Jane’s Information Group in the specific area of money laundering in Colombia. The database will be evaluated under the scope of its Authority, Accuracy, Objectivity, Currency, and Coverage.

First of all, it is important to highlight that Colombia plays a particular role in the chain of money laundering globally. Colombia has been classified by many as the main producer and exporter of cocaine in the world ; in consequence, it should be expected to find generous literature and articles regarding money laundering which support this assertion. Surprisingly, a specialized database as Jane’s Information Group only lists a few more than one hundred results regarding this topic for the last twenty years. On the contrary, Factiva database lists more than five thousand results under the same parameters of search. Similarly, the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime presents more than five thousand articles related to money laundering in Colombia. Hence, it is possible to visualize the limited resources and effort that Jane’s allocates to cover this important issue of international crime in comp...

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...ties. Similarly, objectivity in some articles presented by Jane’s is challenged by some imprecise data which misrepresent the reality of money laundering in Colombia and international crime in general. On the other hand, it is not possible to evaluate the credentials and authority of Jane’s analyst due to the anonymity of their members. In the same sense, the lack of the list of sources used to elaborate Jane’s articles force the reader to blindly believe what the author expresses and hinders the possibility to compare what it is stated. Finally, despite some imprecise data reported in the articles regarding money laundering in Colombia, most of the information is up-to-dated and current. However, it is important to highlight that Jane’s presents reduced coverage in comparison with analogous databases such as Factiva or the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime.

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