"Illegal Entrepreneurship, Organized Crime and Social Control is a festschrift comprised of 19 chapters written primarily by leading European scholars who have done research on organized crime and criminal markets. ... This volume ... is a welcome addition to the literature in highlighting both new insights into understanding organized crime and also the importance of the ethnographic method as a path to get there. The book should bring new attention to Hobbs' work and contributions ... ." (Jay S. Albanese, Rutgers University, clcjbooks.rutgers.edu, March, 2017)
Introduction
Georgios A. Antonopoulos
Part I – ‘Organized crime’: Theoretical perspectives, structures and empirical manifestations
1.Towards a theory of organized crime: some preliminary reflections
Letizia Paoli
2.The Ties that Bind: A Taxonomy of Associational Criminal Structures
Klaus von Lampe
3.Globalisation, Locale and Bankruptcy Fraud: A Historical Exploration
Mike Levi
4.North Brabant: A Brief History of a Hotbed of Organized Crime
Toine Spapens
5.'Struggling, Juggling & Street Corner Hustling': The street economy of Newham's Black community
Kenny Monrose
6.‘Earth, Water, Air, and Fire’: Environmental Crimes, Mafia Power and Political Negligence in Calabria
Anna Sergi & Nigel South
7.Sharks in sheep’s clothing – modalities of predatory and illegal lending in Bulgaria
Anton Kojouharov & Atanas Rusev
8.Women in Criminal Market Activities: Findings from a Study in China
Anqi Shen & Georgios A. Antonopoulos
Part II – Criminal Finances
9.The Financial Flows of Transnational Crime and Tax Fraud in OECD Countries: Some Empirical Facts
10.The Monty Python Flying Circus of Money Laundering and the Question of Proportionality
Petrus van Duyne, Jackie Harvey and Liliya Gelemerova
Part III - Dealing with ‘Organized Crime’
11.Smuggling in the Dodecanese under the Italian Administration
Filippo Marco Espinoza & Georgios Papanicolaou
12.‘The big scare’: Bikers and the construction of organized crime in Norway
Paul Larsson
13.The innovative containment of organized crime problems in Amsterdam’s inner-city, 1996-2015
Cyrille Fijnaut
14.Trafficking and the “Victim Industry” Complex
Paraskevi S. Bouklis
15.Bred and Meet: Gangs and God in East London
Gary Armstrong & James Rosbrook-Thompson
16.EU Fraud & New Member States – Is it a case of the curate’s egg?
Brendan Quirke
17.Where there’s muck, there’s brass – and class: Financial market regulation and public policy
Nicholas Dorn
Part IV – Dick Hobbs’ Influence on Theory and Methods
18.‘Keeping It Real’: Dick Hobbs’ legacy of classic ethnography and the new ultra-realist agenda
Steve Hall and Simon Winlow
19.‘In there like a dirty shirt’: Reflections on fieldwork in the police organization
James Sheptycki
Georgios A. Antonopoulos obtained his doctorate from the University of Durham in 2006. He is currently Professor of Criminology at the School of Social Sciences, Business and Law of Teesside University. His teaching and research interest include the criminality, criminalization and victimization of minority ethnic groups, qualitative research methods, and ‘organized crime’/illegal markets. He is an associate of the Cross-Border Crime Colloquium, associate editor of the journal Trends in Organized Crime (published by Springer), and member of the editorial boards of the journals Global Crime, Journal of Financial Crime, Journal of Money Laundering Control and the British Journal of Criminology. In 2009 he won the European Society of Criminology Young Criminologist Award. In 2014 he was executive director of the International Association for the Study of Organized Crime (IASOC).