Abstract
ABSTRACT This study seeks to investigate the resilience of energy black market in the Gulf of Guinea. The objective of the study is carried out in a theoretical elucidation grounded in qualitative empirical research. The study argues that the regional ‘black’ market of the trivet of crude oil theft, petro-piracy and illegal trade in fuel is an organised business crime; a well-structured illegal enterprise which thrives on inadequate energy infrastructure and corruption in the region. The key ingredients, processes and institutions of the ‘black’ economy are constructed within socio-economic networks, exist in an overlap, and operate in a constantly mutating crime environment. The study concludes that business–network–environment nexus of crime provides a justifiable explanation for the elasticity of the crude economy in the Gulf of Guinea, with the enterprise’s socio-economic infrastructure enhancing its susceptibility as much as it reinforces its resilience and should be the fulcrum of targeted measures.
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