Description

Book Synopsis

This edited volume brings together the most recent research about various aspects of organized crime and the responses that have developed worldwide as a result to contain serious criminal acts. This book focuses particularly on the way criminal networking and illegal markets have developed during the first two decades of the 21st century. It examines how these developments have influenced the motivations and opportunities to commit organized crime. The volume not only focuses on illegal activities in illegal markets, such as drug and human trafficking, but also addresses organized crime and deviance in various legitimate industries. The contributions were presented at seminars of the Centre for Information and Research on Organized Crime (CIROC), and will be of particular interest to organized crime scholars and researchers, as well as advanced students of criminology across the world.



Table of Contents
Chapter 1. Setting the scene.- Part. 1 Markets and networks.- Chapter 2. The Development and Surges of Organized Crime: An Application of Enterprise Theory.- Chapter 3. The organisation of crime in the transnational adoption market.- Chapter 4. Drug crime and the port of Rotterdam: About the phenomenon and its approach.- Chapter 5. Drug-related organized crime in the Meuse Rhine EU-region and the role of national borders.- Chapter 6. ‘Clan Crime’ in Germany: Migration Politics, Socio-economic Conditions and Intergenerational Transmissions of Criminal Behavior.- Chapter 7. Arab Organized Crime in Israel.- Chapter 8. The h200d office: the local embeddedness of the Dutch Crips gang.- Chapter 9. Contract Killings by Organised Crime Groups: The Spread of Deadly Violence.- Part 2. Responses.- Chapter 10. The criminalization of the trade in wildlife.- Chapter 11. Policing the Environment: The Prosecution of Wildlife and Environmental Crimes.- Chapter 12. Why The Hague Convention Isn’t Enough: addressing enabling environments for criminality in intercountry adoption.- Chapter 13. Tackling criminal family networks in the Netherlands: observations & approaches.- Chapter 14. Are Dark Number Estimates of Crime Feasible and Useful?.

Organized Crime in the 21st Century: Motivations, Opportunities, and Constraints

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    A Hardback by Hans Nelen, Dina Siegel

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      View other formats and editions of Organized Crime in the 21st Century: Motivations, Opportunities, and Constraints by Hans Nelen

      Publisher: Springer International Publishing AG
      Publication Date: 11/03/2023
      ISBN13: 9783031215759, 978-3031215759
      ISBN10:

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      This edited volume brings together the most recent research about various aspects of organized crime and the responses that have developed worldwide as a result to contain serious criminal acts. This book focuses particularly on the way criminal networking and illegal markets have developed during the first two decades of the 21st century. It examines how these developments have influenced the motivations and opportunities to commit organized crime. The volume not only focuses on illegal activities in illegal markets, such as drug and human trafficking, but also addresses organized crime and deviance in various legitimate industries. The contributions were presented at seminars of the Centre for Information and Research on Organized Crime (CIROC), and will be of particular interest to organized crime scholars and researchers, as well as advanced students of criminology across the world.



      Table of Contents
      Chapter 1. Setting the scene.- Part. 1 Markets and networks.- Chapter 2. The Development and Surges of Organized Crime: An Application of Enterprise Theory.- Chapter 3. The organisation of crime in the transnational adoption market.- Chapter 4. Drug crime and the port of Rotterdam: About the phenomenon and its approach.- Chapter 5. Drug-related organized crime in the Meuse Rhine EU-region and the role of national borders.- Chapter 6. ‘Clan Crime’ in Germany: Migration Politics, Socio-economic Conditions and Intergenerational Transmissions of Criminal Behavior.- Chapter 7. Arab Organized Crime in Israel.- Chapter 8. The h200d office: the local embeddedness of the Dutch Crips gang.- Chapter 9. Contract Killings by Organised Crime Groups: The Spread of Deadly Violence.- Part 2. Responses.- Chapter 10. The criminalization of the trade in wildlife.- Chapter 11. Policing the Environment: The Prosecution of Wildlife and Environmental Crimes.- Chapter 12. Why The Hague Convention Isn’t Enough: addressing enabling environments for criminality in intercountry adoption.- Chapter 13. Tackling criminal family networks in the Netherlands: observations & approaches.- Chapter 14. Are Dark Number Estimates of Crime Feasible and Useful?.

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