Computational Strategies Strengthening Conformity with Financial Crime Governance in Institutions
- Authors
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Dr. Daniel Rolle
School of Computational Studies, Nassau Technical University, BahamasAuthor
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- Keywords:
- Financial Crime Governance, Computational Strategies, Grid Computing, Anti-Money Laundering
- Abstract
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The rapid digitalization of financial services has intensified both the scale and sophistication of financial crimes, necessitating the development of advanced computational strategies for effective governance and compliance. Traditional regulatory frameworks, largely dependent on static rule-based systems, have proven insufficient in addressing the dynamic and adaptive nature of illicit financial activities. This research paper examines the role of computational strategies in strengthening conformity with financial crime governance within financial institutions by integrating distributed computing, game-theoretic modeling, and machine learning-based policy optimization.
The study proposes a novel interdisciplinary framework that leverages grid computing architectures, incentive-based resource allocation mechanisms, and intelligent anomaly detection systems to enhance Anti-Money Laundering (AML) compliance and fraud prevention. Drawing on concepts from computational grids, economic theory, and cybersecurity-driven financial crime analysis, the research conceptualizes financial crime governance as a distributed optimization problem where multiple agents interact under regulatory constraints.
Methodologically, the paper integrates computational resource management models with policy optimization algorithms to develop adaptive compliance mechanisms. The findings indicate that computational strategies significantly improve scalability, real-time processing, and detection accuracy while reducing operational inefficiencies. In particular, machine learning-driven policy optimization enhances decision-making processes and regulatory alignment (Singh, 2025).
The research contributes to the theoretical advancement of financial crime governance by bridging the gap between distributed computing systems and regulatory compliance frameworks. It also provides practical insights into the implementation of scalable and adaptive systems in financial institutions. Limitations related to computational complexity, data privacy, and system interoperability are critically examined. The paper concludes by recommending future research directions focusing on decentralized compliance architectures, explainable AI models, and cross-institutional collaboration mechanisms. - Downloads
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- References
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Economic Crime. Accessed: Jul. 19, 2021. [Online]. Available: https://www.europol.europa.eu/crime-areas-and-trends/crime-areas/economic-crime
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- 2025-09-30
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- Articles
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Copyright (c) 2025 Dr. Daniel Rolle (Author)

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
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