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Defining and Defying Organised Crime
DOI link for Defining and Defying Organised Crime
Defining and Defying Organised Crime book
Defining and Defying Organised Crime
DOI link for Defining and Defying Organised Crime
Defining and Defying Organised Crime book
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ABSTRACT
Organized crime is now a major threat to all industrial and non-industrial countries. Using an inter-disciplinary and comparative approach this book examines the nature of this threat. By analysing the existing, official institutional discourse on organized crime it examines whether or not it has an impact on perceptions of the threat and on the reality of organized crime.
The book first part of the book explores both the paradigm and the rationale of policy output in the fight against organized crime, and also exposes the often ‘hidden’ internal assumptions embedded in policy making. The second part examines the perceptions of organized crime as expressed by various actors, for example, the general public in the Balkans and in Japan, the criminal justice system in USA and circles within the international scientific community. Finally, the third part provides an overall investigation into the realities of organized crime with chapters that survey its empirical manifestations in various parts of the world.
This book will be of interest to students and scholars of international relations, criminology, security studies and practitioners.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |12 pages
Introduction: Deconstruction in progress: towards a better understanding of organized crime?
part |2 pages
Part I Discourse and definitions
chapter 2|14 pages
The criminal not the crime: Practitioner discourse and the policing of organized crime in England and Wales
chapter 3|12 pages
The evolution of the European Union’s understanding of organized crime and its embedment in EU discourse
chapter 4|14 pages
International policy discourses on transnational organized crime: The role of an international expertise
part |2 pages
Part II Perceptions
chapter 5|14 pages
Transnational organized crime and the global security agenda: Different perceptions and conflicting strategies
chapter 6|14 pages
Evolving perceptions of organized crime: The use of RICO in the United States
chapter 8|18 pages
The social perception of organized crime in the Balkans: a world of diverging views? JANA ARSOVSKA AND PANOS A . KOSTAKOS
part |2 pages
Part III Reality