When a hospital cannot pay for fuel, or a family’s remittance disappears into a compliance queue, the real story of sanctions begins. This book steps into that hidden world, where weaponised finance is designed, tested, and defended by people whose names will never appear in headlines. Through vivid biographies of lawyers, compliance chiefs, and data investigators, it traces the evolution of economic sanctions history from blunt embargoes to finely tuned financial warfare book strategies. Readers follow export control tacticians, architects of swift payment systems, and specialists in sanctions compliance as they wrestle with secondary sanctions risks and global trade restrictions. Alongside them stand the designers of humanitarian carve-outs, struggling to limit the humanitarian impact of sanctions while navigating cautious banks and tangled rules. This is written for policy watchers, banking professionals, human rights advocates, and general readers who sense that today’s international banking ethics debates are really about power and responsibility. Rather than offering legal advice or advocacy slogans, it gives a clear mental model for how sanction campaigns are built, how export control enforcement actually works in offices and operations, and where moral injury takes root. By the end, readers can recognise the levers inside financial systems, understand who pulls them, and judge for themselves when pressure crosses the line into damage.
Sanctions Architects
SKU: 9789376558230
$22.99 Regular Price
$18.50Sale Price
- Selma Aarvik writes about the quiet places where law, finance, and ethics collide. Her work follows the people who design sanctions, staff compliance desks, and try to keep humanitarian channels open when political tempers run hot. Rather than treating sanctions as abstract policy, she looks at the biographies behind the spreadsheets: the case officers, data sleuths, and back-office staff whose decisions decide whether money moves or stalls. Growing up in a port city where older relatives spoke about embargoes and shortages, she learnt early that trade rules were felt first in kitchens and chemists, not just in parliaments. Her writing brings that historical memory to bear on today's weaponised finance, asking who carries the moral weight when economic tools become instruments of pressure. Across her work, she aims to equip readers to see sanctions as human-made systems that can be redesigned, not as automatic responses to every crisis.


















