Sanctions are used to coerce countries to toe a diplomatic, economic, or political line. The United States and other national governments and international bodies have been busy with these of late, making significant changes to their sanctions programs. Most recently, on November 16, 2012, the U.S. eased a decades-old import ban on most goods of Burmese origin. This step followed on the heels of an easing of restrictions on new investments in Burma and on the exportation of financial services to Burma.

The U.S. government’s relaxation of its Burmese sanctions program came after a move to impose more restrictive sanctions on Iran and Syria, a step also taken by the European Union and other national governments.

Staying on top of shifting international sanctions programs imposed by the U.S. government and other national governments and international organizations can be a daunting and time-consuming task for corporate compliance officers—the details are tedious and the stakes are high.

Below are some resources and tools that can assist counsel in navigating the shifting sands of international sanctions:

National Governments and International Organizations Resources

U.S. Government: The U.S. Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) administers and enforces economic and trade sanctions imposed by the United States on foreign countries and listed entities, including international narcotics traffickers, terrorists, weapons of mass destruction proliferators, and others.

The OFAC website contains a wealth of information on U.S. sanctions programs imposed on certain foreign countries and their nationals. For country-specific information, the OFAC website has a resource center with an overview of U.S. sanctions programs aimed at particular countries. The OFAC site also contains information on recent OFAC actions, a great resource for counsel to stay on top of U.S. international sanctions developments.

OFAC’s Resource Center has sanctions program information for specific industry groups, including for the financial sector, the insurance industry, and for exporters/importers.

The OFAC site provides a good resource for quickly and easily checking names against the U.S. government’s Specially Designated Nationals and Blocked Persons list (SDN). While a useful resource for a quick search, the SDN search function does not detect misspellings or other incorrectly entered text, and does not make use of “fuzzy logic” to return near matches. For more refined search options, see the global search engine information below.

The U.S. government also maintains a website containing a consolidated spreadsheet of export screening lists of the Departments of Commerce, State, and the Treasury. The export.gov site also contains useful articles, videos, and other reference material for U.S. companies interested in learning more about export opportunities and compliance needs.

United Nations: The United Nations Security Council’s Sanctions Committees maintain a compendium of U.N. sanction programs. The U.N. website contains links to the latest versions of all U.N. Security Council targeted sanctions lists.

European Union: The E.U. maintains an overview of sanctions adopted within the framework of its Common Foreign and Security Policy. The E.U. site offers a consolidated list containing the names and identification details of all persons, groups, and entities targeted by financial restrictions, plus documents detailing the objectives and principles guiding E.U. sanctions policy.

United Kingdom: The U.K.’s Foreign and Commonwealth Office maintains a website detailing U.K. sanctions imposed on individual countries. The U.K. site includes background information on U.N. and E.U. sanctions, and contact information for the U.K. offices involved in international sanctions compliance.

In addition, the U.K.’s Asset Freezing Unit website has a consolidated list of asset-freeze targets designated by the U.N., E.U. and U.K. under current international sanctions regimes. The U.K.’s Asset Freezing Unit is responsible for the implementation and administration of international financial sanctions in effect in the United Kingdom.

Non-Governmental Resources

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