Introduction
Supply chain management has become a strategic pillar for corporate sustainability and reputation—particularly in regulated sectors or those exposed to the risk of criminal infiltration. By nature, global supply chains are fragmented and multi-layered, making them especially vulnerable to illicit activities such as money laundering, fraud, undeclared labour, and corporate opacity, which may infiltrate silently yet systematically.
In this context, embedding anti-money laundering (AML) and counter-terrorism financing (CFT) principles within procurement processes and third-party due diligence is no longer a mere formality. It is now an operational, regulatory, and cultural necessity—a path towards building a healthy, transparent, and genuinely competitive corporate ecosystem.
Supply Chains and criminal infiltration: why a new approach is needed
Investigative and judicial experience highlights that criminal infiltration in production chains is not a remote risk—it is a tangible reality. From underpaid labour and coerced suppliers to the creation of fictitious consortia, red flags are frequently overlooked or underestimated. This is due to several factors:
- a limited perception of risk, often restricted to financial or reputational aspects;
- a lack of corporate culture that encourages the reporting of anomalies as a form of oversight rather than conflict;
- and the absence of adequate technological and methodological tools to effectively map and monitor the full supply chain.
As emphasised at the conference “Assessing Risks in Supply Chains” (original title “Valutare i rischi nelle supply chain“), organised by Transcrime and Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, a paradigm shift is needed—one built on four essential pillars:
- a widespread and shared risk culture that extends due diligence to sub-suppliers;
- the adoption of advanced technologies integrated into business processes to transform data into actionable insights;
- the implementation of robust regulatory and procedural safeguards, as outlined by Legislative Decree 231/2001;
- and collaboration between internal functions and public/private stakeholders to foster a virtuous circle of controls and synergies.
Read more: “Organized crime: adapting due diligence to evolving threats.”