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The Looting Machine: Warlords, Oligarchs, Corporations, Smugglers, and the Theft of Africas Wealth Audiobook, by Tom Burgis Play Audiobook Sample

The Looting Machine: Warlords, Oligarchs, Corporations, Smugglers, and the Theft of Africa's Wealth Audiobook

The Looting Machine: Warlords, Oligarchs, Corporations, Smugglers, and the Theft of Africas Wealth Audiobook, by Tom Burgis Play Audiobook Sample
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Read By: Dugald Bruce-Lockhart, Dugald Bruce-Lockhart Publisher: PublicAffairs Listen Time: at 1.0x Speed 6.83 hours at 1.5x Speed 5.13 hours at 2.0x Speed Release Date: June 2025 Format: Unabridged Audiobook ISBN: 9781668654224

Quick Stats About this Audiobook

Total Audiobook Chapters:

15

Longest Chapter Length:

83:02 minutes

Shortest Chapter Length:

36 seconds

Average Chapter Length:

40:40 minutes

Audiobooks by this Author:

2

Other Audiobooks Written by Tom Burgis: > View All...

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Publisher Description

An “impressive” (Wall Street Journal) exposé of  twenty-first century individuals and companies who have become obscenely rich from the resource trade in Africa

Africa is the world’s poorest continent and, arguably, its richest. In The Looting Machine, Tom Burgis takes readers on a gripping journey into the world of the magnates and militiamen, the despots and jet-setting executives who gorge on Africa’s vast stocks of oil, gas, metals, and precious stones. Combining deep reporting with an action-packed narrative, Burgis presents a blistering investigation of the plunder of a continent and the terrible human toll.

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"A great scrapbook of exploitation. It is written in a way that will appeal to the general reader, but still interest specialists...Burgis has the good sense not to present [the cruel contrast between individual poverty and national wealth] in an alarmist way, but with an understatement that is far more powerful...The Looting Machine is in part a means of self-exoneration, a way of making amends to those he ultimately could not help...[In this book he] has done a service to some of the world’s poorest people."

— Financial Times

Quotes

  • A Financial Times Best Book of the Year, 2015

  • A great scrapbook of exploitation. It is written in a way that will appeal to the general reader, but still interest specialists...Burgis has the good sense not to present [the cruel contrast between individual poverty and national wealth] in an alarmist way, but with an understatement that is far more powerful...The Looting Machine is in part a means of self‑exoneration, a way of making amends to those he ultimately could not help...[In this book he] has done a service to some of the world’s poorest people.

    — Financial Times
  • A powerful new book.

    — Nicholas Kristof, New York Times
  • [An] impressive study… It is to Mr. Burgis's tremendous credit that he writes with such tenacity.

    — Wall Street Journal
  • [Burgis] presents a lively portrait of the rapacious ‘looting machine’...a rich collage of examples showing the links between corrupt companies and African elites.

    — Economist
  • [Burgis] brings the tools of an investigative reporter and the sensibility of a foreign correspondent. [He] transcends the tired binary debate about the root causes of the continent's misery.

    — Howard French, Foreign Affairs
  • A brave and defiant book.

    — New York Times Sunday Book Review
  • A rollercoaster read. Filled with vignettes on spooks, smugglers and kleptocratic warlords with suitcases of cash, it reads like a crime thriller, while at the same time being a well‑researched, accessible account of the extractives industry; the privatisation of power in Africa and its impact on the continent’s people.

    — African Arguments
  • Brilliant fascinating detail. The book lives up to its colourful subtitle: ‘Warlords, tycoons, smugglers and the systematic theft of Africa's wealth.’ Showing the finesse and determination that has won him awards at the FT, and at considerable risk to his own well‑being, Burgis tracks down and confronts the people at the centre of this plunder.

    — African Research Institute
  • This fine book...catalogues the grotesque self‑enrichment of the callous rulers of Angola, Congo, Equatorial Guinea and Nigeria, countries that should be immensely wealthy, but which remain poor, even by African standards. In each case, this theft of national treasure would be impossible without non‑African facilitators. ... Burgis’s book is essential to understanding why poverty, ignorance and conflict persist in Africa.

    — Independent Catholic News
  • After nine years reporting on Africa for the Financial Times, Tom Burgis exposes how the extractive industries have turned into a hideous looting machine [an] informative book.

    — The Guardian (UK)
  • [Burgis] makes a powerful case, through anecdote and evidence, that the dirty trade in raw materials serves individuals’ own enrichment and the demands of oligarchic and state interests worldwide.

    — The Times (UK)
  • Burgis shows how even the World Bank is linked to this looting [of Africa, and he] makes an important case colourfully, convincingly and at times courageously as he confronts some of those involved in the pillaging.

    — Observer (UK)
  • Revealing... Burgis explains lucidly how the oil and mineral bonanza subverts societies and corrupts western multinational companies trying to cash in... [He] is particularly acute in analysing how multinationals connive in this institutionalised theft. This intelligent book should give us all pause for thought when we fill our cars with petrol.

    — The Sunday Times (UK)
  • An excellent book. Despite Africa's impressive economic 5% growth rate, Tom Burgis ensures that we don't stop wondering who does what in Africa and how we are all party to what Western investors” are up to. The post‑colonial corruption and rape of African resource to the benefit of western consumption is still alive and horribly well.

    — Jon Snow, presenter, Channel 4 News (UK)
  • Essential for understanding the colonial Africa of the past and, even more so, the diverse Africa of today.

    — Library Journal
  • A brave, excoriating exposé of the systematic ruination of resource‑rich countries of Africa, leaving ‘penury and strife’ for its millions of inhabitants...An earnest, eye‑opening, important account for Western readers.

    — Kirkus (Starred)
  • [An] excellent, finely reported book...The great value of The Looting Machine lies in its fresh detail, storytelling and the characters Burgis introduces. The Looting Machine is crammed with colour and lively investigative reporting.

    — Literary Review (UK)

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About Tom Burgis

Tom Burgis has been tenacious and intrepid in confronting the powerful vested interests—corporate, military, financial and political—that have fed to excess off Africa’s riches. He has been reporting for the Financial Times for the last eight years, writing a series of prizewinning investigative reports from Johannesburg and Lagos. He was the winner of the FT’s second annual Jones-Mauthner Memorial Prize for his superb reporting and on corruption, and the Jerwood Award for a nonfiction book in progress for The Looting Machine.

About the Narrators

Dugald Bruce-Lockhart trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art and is both an actor and a director. He is an associate director of the Central School of Speech and Drama as well as the Propeller Theatre Company. He has worked with numerous theatres across the United Kingdom as an actor. His television credits include Case Histories, Walter’s War, and Hotel Babylon. Dugald continues to teach and direct for drama schools as well as lead acting workshops.

Dugald Bruce-Lockhart trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art and is both an actor and a director. He is an associate director of the Central School of Speech and Drama as well as the Propeller Theatre Company. He has worked with numerous theatres across the United Kingdom as an actor. His television credits include Case Histories, Walter’s War, and Hotel Babylon. Dugald continues to teach and direct for drama schools as well as lead acting workshops.