Mafia-type Organisations and Extortion in Italy
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Product details
- ISBN 9780415786843
- Weight: 408g
- Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
- Publication Date: 23 Jan 2017
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Hardback
Mafia-type organizations generate several distorting effects on the economy. In Italy their presence is endemic, and not only in Southern regions such as Sicily, Campania or Calabria. Such organizations endure the fierce and continuous pressure exerted by Italian anti-mafia policy, maybe the most articulate and effective such policy in the world. Nevertheless, they have survived by submerging, transforming, and relocating their operations.
The analysis of the different Mafias of today benefits from a huge amount of empirical data produced by investigators. This allows us to outline more reliable indexes of the penetration of Mafiosi in given territories, as well as to estimate the size of their activities in a transparent and empirically testable way. The contributions gathered in this book stem from the application of an innovative methodology originally introduced by the Fondazione Rocco Chinnici, and they enlarge our understanding of such a complex and dynamic phenomenon. After the presentation of the approach, the chapters are devoted to the Camorra's present situation, to an estimate of the size of extortion, to a comparison between Cosa Nostra and Camorra, to the analysis of wiretapped conversations and, finally, to the delocalization of Mafias and the perspectives of a European anti-mafia policy. This book was originally published as a special issue of Global Crime.
Giacomo Di Gennaro is Professor of Sociology and Planning and Management of Social Policies, as well as Director of the Master’s Degree in ‘Criminology and Criminal Law: Criminal and Policy Analysis for Urban Security’, at Federico II University, Naples, Italy.
Antonio La Spina is Professor of Sociology and Public Policy at LUISS, Rome, Italy, where he is Co-director of the Master’s Degree in ‘Policies against Corruption and Organized Crime’. He is also a consultant of the Italian Parliamentary Antimafia Commission.
