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Global Organized Crime and International Security
DOI link for Global Organized Crime and International Security
Global Organized Crime and International Security book
Global Organized Crime and International Security
DOI link for Global Organized Crime and International Security
Global Organized Crime and International Security book
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ABSTRACT
Published in 1999, this book focuses on organized crime as a worldwide phenomenon that has taken great advantage of enabling technology in banking, communications and transportation to build what is probably the first true 'virtual' corporation in the world. It looks at organized crime as a threat to national and international security ironically stemming, in part, from the collapse of the Soviet empire that provided an already thriving, ruthless and well-organized system of graft, corruption and crime with a new lease of life and also unleashed it on to the world scene. Organized crime is also seen as a system of transnational alliances with the potential to destabilize democratic values and institutions; distort regional, if not worldwide, economies; and subvert the international order by allying itself with terrorist organizations, rogue states and developing countries in search of rapid industrialization and market dominance.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |1 pages
Transnational Organized Crime: The Globalization of Crime
chapter |10 pages
The Evolution of Espionage Networks and the Crisis of International Terrorism and Global Organized Crime
chapter |12 pages
The European Union and Organized Crime: Fighting a New Enemy with Many Tentacles
part |1 pages
The Case Studies
chapter |15 pages
The Infiltration of Organized Crime in the Emilia-Romagna Region: Possible Interpretations for a New Social Defence
chapter |16 pages
Transnational Organized Crime in Spain: Structural Factors Explaining its Penetration
chapter |13 pages
Opening and Closing the 49th Parallel: Responses to Free Trade and to Trans-Border Crime in Canada since 1989 1
chapter |14 pages
“Contested Jurisdiction Border Communities” and Cross-Border Crime: The Case of the Akwesasne
chapter |19 pages
The Use of the “Shining Path” Myth in the Context of the All-Out War Against the “Narco-Guerilla”
chapter |5 pages
Regionalization and Expansion: The Growth of Organized Crime in East Siberia
chapter |9 pages
Alienation and Female Criminality: The Case of Puerto Rico
part |1 pages
Public Policy and Interventions