Using the script approach, this article analyses the different stages that characterise the infiltration of organised crime groups in the public construction industry. Three different Italian local contexts with a high presence of organised crime groups (Sicily, Calabria and Campania) are considered. The Sicilian case is analysed by detail using the script approach and following the dynamic of organised crime action: preparation, enabling conditions, target selection, the acts (of violence and corruption) or ‘the doing’, and the post-conditions or aftermath. The script approach helps in a micro-analysis of organised crime that draws on general knowledge on the topic deriving from the macro-analysis currently undertaken in the literature. Because to date this analysis has mainly produced crime control remedies, the author hopes that the microapproach may help in developing more concrete situational crime prevention measures. |
Zoekresultaat: 2 artikelen
Jaar 2011 xArtikel |
Infiltratie van de bouwsector door de Italiaanse maffia |
Tijdschrift | Justitiële verkenningen, Aflevering 2 2011 |
Auteurs | E.U. Savona |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
Artikel |
Gewone beroepen en georganiseerde criminaliteit |
Tijdschrift | Tijdschrift voor Criminologie, Aflevering 2 2011 |
Trefwoorden | organized crime, occupations, opportunity, concealment |
Auteurs | Henk van de Bunt, Krista Huisman en Karin van Wingerde |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
There is a large – and still growing – body of criminological literature on the relationship between crime and work. However, the exact nature of that relationship often remains diffuse. In this article we explored the relationships between organized crime and work. Based on analysis of the forty most recent cases of the Organized Crime Monitor we distinguished between two types of relations connecting organized crime and work. First, crimes can be based in the occupation of the offender when the occupation provides concrete opportunities to offend or facilitates the crimes of others. Secondly, the occupation of the offender can also be used as a shield concealing the illegal behavior or identity of the offender. |