Corruption, Fraud, Organized Crime, and the Shadow Economy

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Ch Ap
Chinese Criminal Code
Chinese Government
collar
compliance risk assessment
Corruption
crimes
Criminal Oenses
criminology research
economic inequality studies
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financial
financial crime analysis
Fraud
Global Gdp
Gray Economy
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Hawala Banking
Hells Angels
human
Human Tracking
informal
Informal Economy
laundering
Letterbox Companies
Maximilian Edelbacher
money
Money Laundering
multinational crime networks analysis
Nancial Crime
Organized Crime
policy intervention strategies
Public Safety Commission
Shadow Economy
Title III
trafficking
transnational illicit markets
UN
Undeclared Work
UNO
USA Patriot Act
Vice Versa
white
White Collar Crime
White Collar Criminals

Product details

  • ISBN 9781482255317
  • Weight: 793g
  • Dimensions: 219 x 276mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Oct 2015
  • Publisher: Apple Academic Press Inc.
  • Publication City/Country: CA
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Fueled by corruption, fraud, and organized crime, the shadow economy—also known as the informal, black market, illegal, or underground economy—is currently on the rise worldwide. Corruption, Fraud, Organized Crime, and the Shadow Economy addresses shadow economies and the players involved by examining various aspects of criminal law and prosecution.

This book gathers the insights of several world-renowned professionals and academics in order to portray the links between organized crime, the shadow economy, and corruption. It discusses how to address these issues as they relate to crime, criminal law, and prosecution of the players involved.

The constant misconception by policy makers of the relationships between organized crime, corruption, and the shadow economy fuels the present status quo of economic inequality, increases the risks of future economic crises, victimizes people, and even damages the environment. This book takes a critical, multinational, multidisciplinary, common-sense approach to complex and globalized problems of conventional and unconventional deviance through the shadow economy.

The contributors identify key critical areas in specific countries from which they originate, adding an insider’s perspective to their analyses. With these insights and the use of illustrative case studies, they highlight best practices as well as mistakes to avoid in encountering the obstacles that lie ahead in combating the shadow economy.

Maximilian Edelbacher graduated from Vienna University (Mag. Jur.) and was Hofrat (Councilor) of the Federal Police of Austria. He served as the chief of the Major Crime Bureau and as an international expert for the Council of Europe, OSCE, and UNO. He also chaired the Austrian Antifraud Insurance Bureau and lectured at several universities, including the Vienna University of Economics and Business Administration, Danube University in Krems, and the Vienna University Department of Sociology. Edelbacher was appointed a special investigator of the AVUS Group on white-collar crime cases, as vice-president of the Vienna Liaison Office, of the Academic Council on the United Nations, and as a director of the International Police Executive Symposium (IPES). He is the author of a number of books and journal articles.

Peter C. Kratcoski, PhD, is a professor emeritus and adjunct professor at Kent State University. He earned his PhD in sociology from Pennsylvania State University, University Park. He taught at the College of St. Thomas, St. Paul, Minnesota and at Pennsylvania State University before assuming the position of assistant professor of sociology at Kent State University in 1969. He retired as professor of criminal justice studies and chairman of the Department of Criminal Justice Studies at Kent State University in 1997. He has published many books, book chapters, and journal articles on juvenile delinquency, juvenile justice, international policing, and crime prevention. He is a member of the International Police Executive Symposium, the Society for Police and Criminal Psychology, and the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences.

Bojan Dobovšek is a member of the Slovenian parliament and a full professor on the faculty of criminal justice and security at the University of Maribor, Slovenia. He earned his PhD in criminology from the University of Ljubljana, Slovenia. He is the author of a book on organized crime and terrorism and editor of several publications on corruption and organized crime. His research focuses on corruption in state institutions, corruption networks, organized crime and terrorism, economic and financial crime, migration problems and human trafficking, and art crime investigation. He served on the Commission for the Prevention of Corruption and is currently completing research on ecological crime. He is a partner of the Institute for Politikwissenschaft und Sozialforschung, University of Wurzburg, Germany, and a visiting professor on faculties in Ghent, Sarajevo, Belgrade, and Zagreb.