-
Naturalizing insecurity: resilience and drug-related Organized Crime in the Americas Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2022-04-29 Peter Finkenbusch
This article critically interrogates the political effect of portraying drug-related organized crime in the Americas as a resilient market phenomenon. It works out how both drug demand and supply are constructed as immune to repressive policy interventions of the War on Drugs. Drug demand is seen as a pathologic consumer habit which is inelastic to price changes brought about by interdiction. Drug
-
Organized crime-related disappearances in Mexico: evidence from Durango, Tamaulipas, and Coahuila Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2022-04-22 Laura H. Atuesta, Isaac Vargas González
-
From prison gangs to transnational mafia: the expansion of organized crime in Brazil Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2022-04-20 Stephanie G. Stahlberg
-
Criminal markets and networks in Cyberspace Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2022-04-01 Anita Lavorgna, Georgios A. Antonopoulos
This is an introduction to the special issue of Trends in Organized Crime on ‘criminal markets and networks in cyberspace’. All the contributions to this special issue, even if from different standpoints and focuses, help us understand how cyberspace is (re)shaping offenses and offenders.
-
Unraveling the crime scripts of phishing networks: an analysis of 45 court cases in the Netherlands Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2022-02-13 Joeri Loggen, Rutger Leukfeldt
This article examines the modus operandi of phishing for information related to bank accounts in The Netherlands, by composing crime scripts based on 93 Dutch court transcripts. The analysis resulted in two overarching crime scripts of phishing. In the first crime script, criminals aim to steal victims' ATM cards and pin numbers. In crime script two, criminals aim to steal victims' personal data and
-
Walls of silence and organized crime: a theoretical and empirical exploration into the shielding of criminal activities from authorities Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2022-01-25 Robert A. Roks, Edwin W. Kruisbergen, Edward R. Kleemans
In this article, we aim to further our understanding of the social embeddedness of organized crime by exploring the (possible) ways the social environment adds to the shielding of organized crime or criminal activities by organized crime groups. We argue that the metaphor of ‘walls of silence’ provides a fruitful way to examine the shielding of organized crime. Based on a theoretical and empirical
-
The nexus between corruption and money laundering: deconstructing the Toledo-Odebrecht network in Peru Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2022-01-22 Costa Jacopo
The paper targets the nexus between corruption and money laundering. Scholars and practitioners recently observed how offshore financial centers and financial infrastructures have become central in facilitating corruption and other criminal activities. Offshore vehicles often serve to conceal the connections between business people and politically exposed persons. Secrecy jurisdictions and service
-
Do high value target strikes reduce cartel-related violence? An empirical assessment of crime trends in Tijuana, Mexico Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2022-01-10 Del Rio, Juan
High-value target strikes–the practice of apprehending or lethally targeting high-ranking members of transnational criminal organizations–has become a frequently used tactic of U.S. and Mexican authorities to combat drug trafficking organizations. The study focuses on the unintentional outcomes of this policy by using an interrupted times-series AutoRegressive Integrative Moving Average (ARIMA) study
-
The processes, logics and economies of violence in organised crime Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2022-01-10 Justin Kotzé, Georgios A. Antonopoulos, Mohammed Rahman
This paper provides an introduction to the articles that comprise this special issue on violence and organised crime. Bringing together research into money laundering, local elections, state interventions and interrelated processes, firearms and home robberies, enforcers and contract killings, this issue explores the relationship between violence and various facets of organised crime. Taken together
-
Cocaine trafficking from non-traditional ports: examining the cases of Argentina, Chile and Uruguay Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2022-01-04 Sampó, Carolina, Troncoso, Valeska
This article presents the results of an exploratory study aimed to analyze the contexts in which the use of Non-Traditional ports of cocaine departure and counter-intuitive routes is prioritized, based on the experience of Argentina, Chile, and Uruguay. Moreover, we show that criminal organizations prioritize the Ports of Buenos Aires, San Antonio and Montevideo, and the counter-intuitive routes that
-
Organised crime and animals Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2021-12-14 van Uhm, Daan, Siegel, Dina
This article provides an introduction to the special issue of Trends in Organized Crime on ‘Organised Crime and Animals’. The special issue contributes to the criminological literature on organised crime, new illicit markets and green criminology. The articles in this special issue offer a wide range of empirical evidence, criminological analysis and theoretical explorations of the various connections
-
Covid-19 and child criminal exploitation in the UK: implications of the pandemic for county lines Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2021-12-06 Brewster, Ben, Robinson, Grace, Silverman, Bernard W., Walsh, Dave
In March 2020, the UK was placed in lockdown following the spread of the Covid-19 virus. Just as legitimate workplaces made changes to enable their employees to work from home, the illicit drugs trade also made alternative arrangements, adapting its supply models to ensure continuity of operations. Based upon qualitative interviews with 46 practitioners, this paper assesses how front-line professionals
-
The heterogeneity of human smugglers: a reflection on the use of concepts in studies on the smuggling of migrants Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2021-12-01 Aziani, Alberto
The use of a broad conceptualization of human smugglers fosters their stereotypical representation. Moreover, the lack of attention to the heterogeneity of smugglers, to their purposes, methods, and organisational choices, leads to the design of unfair and ineffective migration policies. Relying on previous empirical studies on human smuggling and other officially documented instances of the smuggling
-
Mexican organized crime and the illegal trade in totoaba maw Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2021-11-23 Martínez, Israel Alvarado, Alonso, Aitor Ibáñez
The convergence between wildlife trafficking and other serious crimes has received increasing attention within criminological studies. The present study examines how and why Mexican organized crime groups, in particular drug cartels, have shifted their operations from drug trafficking into specific parts of the illegal trade in totoaba maw. By drawing upon literature research, semi-structured interviews
-
An examination of hybrid organized criminal groups’ alliances with terrorist groups Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2021-11-02 Kramer, Reggie
Alliances between organized criminal groups and terrorist groups are understudied relative to other crime-terror dynamics, and alliances between hybrid organized criminal groups and terrorist groups are virtually unstudied. This article compares organized criminal groups and hybrid organized criminal groups’ alliances with terrorist groups, employing the cases of the Camorra, D-Company, and the Albanian
-
Who researches organised crime? A review of organised crime authorship trends (2004–2019) Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2021-10-23 Hosford, Kevin, Aqil, Nauman, Windle, James, Gundur, R. V., Allum, Felia
This article presents a review of organised crime authorship for all articles published in Trends in Organized Crime and Global Crime between 2004 and 2019 (N = 528 articles and 627 individual authors). The results of this review identify a field dominated by White men based in six countries, all in the Global North. Little collaboration occurs; few studies are funded, and few researchers specialise
-
Green criminological perspectives on dog-fighting as organised masculinities -based animal harm Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2021-09-23 Nurse, Angus
Dog-fighting was historically a working-class pursuit within predominantly white, working-class subcultures, representing a distinct type of organised animal exploitation. However, contemporary dog-fighting has moved way from its organised pit-based origins to encompass varied forms of organised activity including street dog-fighting in the form of chain fighting or chain rolling, the use of dogs as
-
Identifying human trafficking indicators in the UK online sex market Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2021-09-17 Giommoni, Luca, Ikwu, Ruth
This study identifies the presence of human trafficking indicators in a UK-based sample of sex workers who advertise their services online. To this end, we developed a crawling and scraping software that enabled the collection of information from 17, 362 advertisements for female sex workers posted on the largest dedicated platform for sex work services in the UK. We then established a set of 10 indicators
-
The role of informal networks in promoting illegal wildlife trade: a qualitative analysis from Uganda Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2021-09-16 Costa, Jacopo, Baez-Camargo, Claudia, Kassa, Saba, Lugolobi, Robert
Illegal wildlife trade (IWT) poses a threat to many countries in Africa, Asia, South and Central America. While the role of informal networks in sustaining wildlife trafficking is ever more on the radar of scholars and practitioners, their modus operandi remains largely understudied. The literature tells us that these informal networks play a role in sustaining this illicit cross-border trade. This
-
COVID-19 and Organized Crime: Strategies employed by criminal groups to increase their profits and power in the first months of the pandemic Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2021-09-13 Aziani, Alberto, Bertoni, Gianluca A., Jofre, Maria, Riccardi, Michele
The COVID-19 pandemic has created new opportunities for organized criminal groups and confronted them with new challenges. Analysis of how these groups have reacted to the pandemic yields better understanding of how they work and enables the devising of more effective counter-strategies. To this end, we identified illustrative cases regarding the provision of illegal governance and infiltration of
-
Forgotten children: a socio-technical systems analysis of the 2004 and 2015 forced child labour reports from Indian cottonseed farms Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2021-09-13 Nayak, Rounaq, Manning, Louise
Using a systems analysis approach, the authors analyse forced child labour incidents in Indian cottonseed farms in the years 2003/04 and 2014/15, and explore the role played by human factors in contributing to the illegal use of child labour in the Indian agri-food sector. National policies on labour welfare and rights are reviewed through the case studies used as a lens to explore wider issues associated
-
European illegal puppy trade and organised crime Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2021-08-24 Maher, Jennifer, Wyatt, Tanya
Organised crime groups’ involvement in illicit markets is a common focus of law enforcement and governments. Drug, weapon, human and wildlife trafficking (and others) are all illegal activities with link to organised crime. This paper explores the overlooked illicit market of puppies. We detail the state of knowledge about the organisation of the UK puppy trade, which includes irresponsible and illegal
-
A structured methodical process for populating a crime script of organized crime activity using OSINT Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2021-08-23 Chainey, Spencer P., Alonso Berbotto, Arantza
Crime script analysis is becoming an increasingly used approach for examining organized crime. Crime scripts can use data from multiple sources, including open sources of intelligence (OSINT). Limited guidance exists, however, on how to populate the content of a crime script with data, and validate these data. This results in crime scripts being generated intuitively, restricts them from being scrutinised
-
Illegal dogfighting: sport or crime? Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2021-08-10 Siegel, Dina, van Uhm, Daan
In recent years there is increasing public attention for dog fighting in Europe. This article focuses on this phenomenon in the Netherlands: its organisation, various actors, modus operandi and possible involvement of organized crime. This qualitative research is based on semi-structured interviews, analysis of police files, observations and online methods. As the result of criminalisation, dogfighting
-
Remembering Carlo Morselli Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2021-08-10 von Lampe, Klaus
This essay celebrates the contributions of Carlo Morselli to the study of organized crime. Drawing on a review of Morselli’s published work, the main lines of his research are highlighted.
-
State-organized crime and the killing of wolves in Norway Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2021-06-29 Ragnhild Sollund, David R. Goyes
While scholars of state crime and organized crime have frequently explored the intersection of these fields with green criminology, for the most part they have not brought the two together as organized state criminality as a means to explore environmental destruction. Of the few explorations of organized state green crime that do exist, most do not embrace a non-speciesist perspective. In this article
-
Fishy business: regulatory and enforcement challenges of transnational organised IUU fishing crimes Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2021-06-24 Andrea A. Stefanus, John A. E. Vervaele
The article aims to find the answer on the main question of how can the criminalisation of IUU fishing, especially when committed by OCGs, under suppression conventions tackle the deficits of regulations and enforcement at the international and national levels? These deficits have origin in the limited prescription by international fisheries instruments and a large autonomy and discretion of states
-
“Journey into hell […where] migrants froze to death”; a critical stylistic analysis of European newspapers’ first response to the 2019 Essex Lorry deaths Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2021-06-23 Christiana Gregoriou, Ilse A. Ras, Nina Muždeka
In the early hours of October 23rd, 2019, 39 people were found dead in a refrigerated lorry in Grays, Essex, UK. This case attracted media interest across the world; in the 48-h period after the story broke, reporting on this discovery extended to newspapers not just in the UK, but also across Europe. This study uses elements of Critical Stylistics (Jeffries 2010) to analyse and compare first response
-
Correction to: Contract killings: a crime script analysis Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2021-06-21 Laura R. de Korte, Edward R. Kleemans
A Correction to this paper has been published: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12117-021-09424-z
-
The modus operandi of transnational computer fraud: a crime script analysis in Vietnam Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2021-06-09 Trong Van Nguyen
This study aims to better understand transnational computer fraud in Vietnam utilizing crime script analysis. Data from criminal profiles and in-depth interviews with investigators were combined, and the results showed that Vietnam could become an operational base for both domestic and foreign criminals to implement transnational computer fraud. This type of fraud, which includes crimes with only minor
-
Understanding the challenges to investigating and prosecuting organ trafficking: a comparative analysis of two cases Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2021-06-03 Frederike Ambagtsheer
The human organ trade is proliferating globally. However, far fewer cases have been prosecuted than would be expected based on estimates of the crime. Research exploring the challenges to investigating and prosecuting organ trafficking cases is practically non-existent. Also no studies exist that explain these challenges utilizing a criminal justice framework. This article aims to explain the legal
-
A tainted reputation it deserves? Crime in the trotting sector of Dutch horse racing Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2021-05-21 Angelique Reuselaars, Frank Bovenkerk
The Netherlands are a small country with an urban underworld history before a serious problem of organized crime has developed since the 1980. The interest of the mob in Horse Race Betting flourished before that time. After a long period of Prohibition since 1911 horse racing (especially trotting) and betting on the results has become a very popular pastime since it was permitted in 1948. Especially
-
Empty pack survey to estimate Illicit Tobacco Trade in the city of Buenos Aires, Argentina Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2021-05-21 Maria Elisabet Pizarro, Gabriel Giacobone, Cinthia Shammah, Michal Stoklosa
While Illicit Tobacco Trade (ITT) is a serious threat to the effectiveness of tobacco control policies worldwide, to this day tobacco-industry independent estimations of the size of the market for illicit tobacco products in the region are still very scarce. There is evidence that the tobacco industry often manipulates ITT estimates to influence policy-making and hinder tobacco control measures. In
-
Connections between trades and trafficking in wildlife and drugs Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2021-05-18 Daan van Uhm, Nigel South, Tanya Wyatt
Whilst drug trafficking has been a concern for several decades, wildlife trafficking has only fairly recently garnered international attention. Often media coverage of wildlife trafficking links it to the illegal trade of drugs. This article analyses wildlife and drug trafficking connections of various kinds. The purpose is to reveal the overlaps and synergies of wildlife and drug trafficking, providing
-
Identifying sex trafficking in Adult Services Websites: an exploratory study with a British police force Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2021-05-05 Xavier L’Hoiry, Alessandro Moretti, Georgios A. Antonopoulos
Human trafficking, commercial sexual exploitation and modern slavery have experienced an unprecedented boom over the past decade due to the development of information and communication technologies (ICTs), particularly in digital and networked environments. These developments have created new opportunities for human exploitation and illegal profiteering. Adult Services Websites (ASWs), online platforms
-
The perfect storm. An analysis of the processes that increase lethal violence in Mexico after 2006 Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2021-04-27 Iván Flores Martínez, Matthew Phillips
Research on ‘the War on Drugs’ in Mexico finds that military interventions increase lethal violence in the country. However, these studies fail to account for other processes that may be driving the behavior of lethal violence in the Mexican municipalities. We find confirmation that these rival processes influence the relative impact that military interventions have on lethal violence. In particular
-
Shaping space. A conceptual framework on the connections between organised crime groups and territories Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2021-04-07 Anna Sergi, Luca Storti
This paper, which is the introduction to this special issue on ‘Spaces of Organised Crime’, aims to analyse the nexus between organised crime groups and territories. Such groups are able to exploit resources that circulate within territorial contexts in which they are embedded. They also operate concretely as entities that can take part to the transformation of spaces into places. Accordingly, we will
-
Contract killings: a crime script analysis Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2021-04-07 Laura R. de Korte, Edward R. Kleemans
This article contributes to our existing knowledge through a crime script analysis of contract killings, based on six extensively analyzed police investigations in the Netherlands. Starting from a universal crime script, a more specific crime script for contract killings is elaborated. To provide a clear picture of the whole process, the description of the scenes focuses on requirements, facilitators
-
The organization of Danish gangs: a transaction cost approach Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2021-03-10 Stefan Kirkegaard Sløk-Madsen, David Skarbek, Andreas Hansen, Alexander Rezaei
How do criminal groups organize, operate, and govern in Denmark? We argue that organized crime groups face governance challenges in the form of principal-agent problems and transaction costs. Based on interviews with law enforcement officers, former gang members, and prisoners, we provide evidence for how people involved in crime respond to these organizational dilemmas. We find that the more severe
-
Cross-jurisdictional review of Australian legislation governing outlaw motorcycle gangs Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2021-03-05 Lorana Bartels, Max Henshaw, Helen Taylor
This paper presents a review of the key Australian legislation passed between 2009 and 2019 targeting outlaw motorcycle gangs (OMCGs). It identifies the key similarities and differences across the reforms and provides examples of the legislation being used to disrupt serious and organised crime activity by OMCGs. It also presents some of the barriers to effective enforcement of the legislation. There
-
Correction to: Networked territorialism: the routes and roots of organised crime Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2021-02-10 Andy Clark, Alistair Fraser, Niall Hamilton-Smith
A Correction to this paper has been published: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12117-021-09405-2
-
Correction to: Survey research with gang and non-gang members in prison: operational lessons from the LoneStar Project Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2021-01-04 Meghan M. Mitchell, Kallee McCullough, Jun Wu, David C. Pyrooz, Scott H. Decker
A Correction to this paper has been published: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12117-020-09404-9
-
‘Through a glass darkly’: organised crime and money laundering policy reflections - an introduction to the special issue Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2021-01-09 Michael Levi, Georgios A. Antonopoulos
This paper provides some reflections on the articles and the report excerpt included in the special issue of Trends in Organised Crime on organised crime and money laundering policy. The aim of this special issue to invite the reader to re-examine conventional wisdom in this issue area. The papers in this special issue emphasise the variation in policy measures, as they articulate the interplay between
-
The poverty business: landlords, illicit practices and reproduction of disadvantaged neighbourhoods in Czechia Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2021-01-03 Petr Kupka, Václav Walach, Alica Brendzová
This paper is guided by the question: How do illicit practices of organized groups contribute to the formation and reproduction of disadvantaged neighbourhoods in Czechia? By asking this question we depart from the dominant understanding of disadvantaged neighbourhoods in the study of organized crime. Instead of seeing them as “breeding grounds of organized crime”, it is explored how regular neighbourhoods
-
Making sense of professional enablers’ involvement in laundering organized crime proceeds and of their regulation Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2020-11-26 Michael Levi
Money laundering has ascended the enforcement and criminological agenda in the course of this century, and has been accompanied by an increased focus on legal professionals as ‘enablers’ of crime. This article explores the dynamics of this enforcement, media and political agenda, and how the legal profession has responded in the UK and elsewhere, within the context of ignoring the difficulties of judging
-
An exploration of organized crime in Italian ports from an institutional perspective. Presence and activities Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2020-11-14 Marco Antonelli
The article will present the results of a qualitative research into organized crime in the Italian port system. It is a pioneering attempt to assess an extensive and diachronic perspective on the presence and activities of organized crime groups into the Italian seaports in order to provide a systematic analytical map through the analysis of institutional law enforcement reports. The article attempts
-
Contested borders: organized crime, governance, and bordering practices in Colombia-Venezuela borderlands Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2020-11-12 Viviana García Pinzón, Jorge Mantilla
Based on the conceptualizations of organized crime as both an enterprise and a form of governance, borderland as a spatial category, and borders as institutions, this paper looks at the politics of bordering practices by organized crime in the Colombian-Venezuelan borderlands. It posits that contrary to the common assumptions about transnational organized crime, criminal organizations not only blur
-
Under a setting sun: the spatial displacement of the yakuza and their longing for visibility Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2020-11-06 Martina Baradel, Jacopo Bortolussi
Spaces occupied by organised crime are usually kept secret, hidden, invisible. Japanese criminal syndicates, the yakuza, made instead visibility a key feature of the spaces they occupy through an overt display of their presence in the territory: in the past, a yakuza headquarter could have been instantly recognised by the crest and group name emblazoned on the front wall. However, recent changes in
-
More Amazon than Mafia: analysing a DDoS stresser service as organised cybercrime Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2020-11-04 Roberto Musotto, David S. Wall
-
Networked territorialism: the routes and roots of organised crime Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2020-10-21 Andy Clark, Alistair Fraser, Niall Hamilton-Smith
In the digital age, space has become increasingly structured by the circuitry of global capital, communications and commodities. This ‘network society’ splinters and fragments territorial space according to the hidden logic of networked global capital; with successful criminal entrepreneurs connecting bases in low-risk, controllable territories with high-profit markets. Drawing on a recent, large-scale
-
Understanding support for Mano Dura strategies: Lessons from Brazil and Colombia Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2020-10-20 Rosen, Jonathan D., Cutrona, Sebastián
There are many scholarly works focusing on organized crime and violence in Latin America. Scholars have shown empirically that tough on crime strategies have had collateral damages and have not been effective. By conducting logistic regression models using individual country survey data, this work seeks to analyze why tough on crime policies remain popular in some Latin American countries despite the
-
Getting a foot in the door. Spaces of cocaine trafficking in the Port of Rotterdam. Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2020-10-07 Robby Roks, Lieselot Bisschop, Richard Staring
As an important gateway to Europe, the Port of Rotterdam is known for its high-quality facilities and efficiency, but also attracts organised crime groups who use the transatlantic legal trade flows to traffic cocaine. Based on a qualitative study, consisting of 73 interviews with public and private actors, an analysis of 10 criminal investigations and field visits to public and private organisations
-
The production of the Mafioso space. A spatial analysis of the sack of Palermo Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2020-09-30 Vincenzo Scalia
This essay will use the theoretical lens of the production of space, provided by David Harvey, to analyse the Sack of Palermo, or the massive destruction of the Conca d’Oro, the fertile land surrounding Palermo, and its substitution with high rise buildings which occurred between 1950 and the 1980s, resulting in the destruction of a vast area of social space which had existed for centuries. Harvey
-
Economic geographies of the illegal: the multiscalar production of cybercrime Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2020-09-29 Tim Hall, Ben Sanders, Mamadou Bah, Owen King, Edward Wigley
Economic geographers have traditionally been reluctant to extend their analysis to illicit and illegal markets despite their being significant in their global economic extent and displaying highly uneven geographies. By contrast, the geographies of licit, legal industries have produced multiple traditions of empirically rich, theoretically diverse accounts. Our understandings of the spatialities of
-
Bloody investment: misaligned incentives, money laundering and violence Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2020-09-13 Vidal Romero
Money laundering is not a victimless crime. Under certain circumstances, it may lead to significant criminal violence. We analyze the specific case of money laundering in local economies. Criminal organizations invest dirty money in legal local businesses, which may lead to short-term improvements in the economy that benefit the population. Authorities with access to local information may (purposely)
-
Entrepreneurial elements of human smuggling rings: findings from a multiple case study Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2020-08-15 Costantino, Fabrizio, Di Nicola, Andrea
Human smuggling towards Europe has reached an unprecedented level in the last years. The past decade has seen an intensification of the demand for irregular migration services, which increased the role of smuggling rings as service providers to assist irregular migrants in evading national border controls, migration regulations and visa requirements. These criminal organizations feature an entrepreneurial
-
From horticulture to psychonautics: an analysis of online communities discussing and trading plants with psychotropic properties Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2020-07-08 Anita Lavorgna, Gopala Sasie Rekha
This study is a spinoff of the cross-disciplinary project “FloraGuard: Tackling the Illegal Trade in Endangered Plants”, and focuses on the analysis of online forums dedicated to the discussion and the trades of plant species, often highly endangered in nature, that are sought after for their psychotropic properties. The study sheds light on the interesting but overlooked area of the intersection of
-
Who are the enforcers? The motives and methods of muscle for hire in West Scotland and the West Midlands Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2020-05-21 Mohammed Rahman, Robert McLean, Ross Deuchar, James Densley
Enforcement, ranging from threats to intimidation to assault to homicide, has long been an established practice within criminal networks. However, comparatively little academic research exists about the nature and role of enforcers within and beyond the context of contract killings. Drawing on qualitative interviews with criminal enforcers from two contrasting sites within the UK—the West Scotland
-
Differentiating criminal networks in the illegal wildlife trade: organized, corporate and disorganized crime Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2020-05-11 Tanya Wyatt, Daan van Uhm, Angus Nurse
Historically, the poaching of wildlife was portrayed as a small-scale local activity in which only small numbers of wildlife would be smuggled illegally by collectors or opportunists. Nowadays, this image has changed: criminal networks are believed to be highly involved in wildlife trafficking, which has become a significant area of illicit activity. Even though wildlife trafficking has become accepted
-
Incapacity, pathology, or expediency? Revisiting accounts of data and analysis weaknesses underpinning international efforts to combat organised crime Trends in Organized Crime (IF 2.8) Pub Date : 2020-05-06 Sappho Xenakis
Organised crime saw swift ascent as a security priority for the international community after the end of the Cold War. High political excitement surrounded the subject of organised crime, accompanied by an apparently bottomless demand for calculations of its magnitude and attendant risks. Over ensuing decades, concerns were repeatedly raised about the limitations afflicting pertinent cross-national