Allum, F. y Gilmour, S. (2012) - Introduction.
Allum, F. y Gilmour, S. (2012) - Introduction.
Allum, F. y Gilmour, S. (2012) - Introduction.
Organized Crime
The philosophy behind this handbook has been to treat and consider
TOC as a plague spreading alongside increasing globalization – the
darker side of modernity. It is an ailment present in all nation states
regardless of their history, political system, economy and civil society. It
is a serious medical condition that cannot be dismissed as a marginal
‘Italian’ problem. Indeed, its presence often has repercussions for the
local community, national government and the international system (Map
I.2).
Map I.2 The Intersection of Transnational Organized Crime and
Instability.
Source: UNODC (2010: 14).
1 is non-ideological
2 is hierarchical
3 has a limited or exclusive membership
4 is perpetual
7 is monopolistic
8 is governed by explicit rules and regulations (1992: 5).
We have argued long and hard about this and have agreed that the
following working definition by van Duyne is a good basic definition from
which our analysis in this handbook is developed: ‘the passing of illegal
goods and/or services over national borders and/or rendering criminal
support to criminal activities or related persons in more than one country’
(van Duyne 2010).4
However, academics and practitioners, as we have already pointed
out, have different agendas and approaches. TOC is a subjective notion
for academics and an objective reality for law enforcers who need to put
a case together to prosecute an individual or group. So how do these
discourses differ?
Academic Discourse
Researching TOC
Practitioner Discourse
As Sheptycki noted, ‘most crime is local in character; that is, most police
work is grounded in relatively small geographic locales’ (1995: 617). And
herein lies the problem – there is a difference between crime (what
criminals do) and police work (what the police do). The fact that police
structures are primarily local in character (Varghese 2010) reflects the
way that the police think about and respond to crime (Gilmour 2008;
Gilmour and France, Chapter 31). This thinking was documented in the
UK, within that broad range of policing paradigms that variously
constitute Intelligence Led Policing (Ratcliffe 2008), by the Association of
Chief Police Officers (ACPO) in its manual of guidance on the National
Intelligence Model (ACPO 2005). The National Intelligence Model (NIM)
divides crime into three distinct areas, based on their geographic spread:
The majority of handbooks that cover areas such as crime and policing
remain very discipline based. The innovative aspect of this handbook is
not only its interdisciplinary nature, but also the dialogue between
international academics (young and established) and practitioners
(national and international) that it presents. This handbook is thus, not a
dictionary, not an encyclopaedia, not an edited collection of unrelated
articles; it is not a research monograph and it is not a special issue of a
journal that brings together conference papers.
This handbook seeks to describe the range of discourses and
narratives that exist and are drawn together around the three words
‘transnational organized crime’. And each word in itself presents a
myriad of understandings, perspectives and approaches as well as firmly
held points of view. In other words, the aim of this handbook is to present
the contemporary debates on the subjects of TOC while describing some
of its current aspects.
When deciding how to present the contemporary debates on TOC, it
became clear that there were some key perspectives that needed to be
elaborated and included. Therefore, you will find some chapters that are
descriptive, others that are interpretive and yet others that present first-
hand experiences. It is important for the reader to engage with the
breadth and depth of the handbook rather than just trying to engage with
the facts and content of one specific chapter, because it is the discussion
between the chapters that provides the essence of any understanding of
TOC. And the readers are invited to construct their own narrative
because, if anything, TOC is local. It is clear that TOC is a forever
changing and evolving phenomenon (perhaps even, phenomena) that
once you think you have understood and described, you take another
look at it and it is completely transformed. In the next couple of years
TOC will continue to be a burning issue, especially the mobility of
criminals and how states and law enforcement agencies deal with this
problem and in its relationship with terrorism.
This handbook is organized into six parts, which present its defining
aspects. Part I is entitled Theories, Concepts, Definitions and Laws. In
this part, TOC is discussed and analysed as a ‘security concept’, as a
‘myth’, as a ‘misrepresentation’ and as a ‘legal’ norm. Through
presenting these distinctive narratives we have sought to introduce the
reader to some of the basic concepts fundamental to engaging with the
debate on TOC. Part II, Origins and Manifestations, explores the
development and many forms of TOC across the continents. It examines
TOC’s different characteristics and discourses in order to provide an
overview of the complexity of the phenomenon and how it affects civil
society and the national security infrastructure of modern nation states.
In Part III, Contagion and Evolution, the apparent diaspora of TOC is
problematized in turn as a social, political, economic and cultural
phenomenon as we explore its spread and growth and reflect upon its
current standing in the world. Within this part, we discuss the various
crossovers between TOC and terrorism in order to illustrate the reach of
one into the other. While we are not saying that they are the same,
neither can we distinguish clearly between them.
Part IV, entitled Intensity and Impact, concentrates on the effects (often
unintended) of attempts to govern and police TOC and its reaction to this
external stimulus. Part V tackles the question of the Governance of TOC.
The chapters here provide an overview of how society, the state and law
enforcement agencies seek to counter TOC from all perspectives. Part
VI, Reaction and Future, seeks to set out the different national
approaches and discourses to fighting TOC while exposing the possible
problems that are being stored up for the years ahead. The reader is
presented with interpretations that will enable a better understanding of
the nature of TOC. In other words, its adaptability, fluidity and ability to
undermine any attempt to control it, and its capacity and foresight to
capture every (and any) opportunity that presents itself.
This handbook could never simply be about facts and figures. TOC is
an idea and a brutish animal. Thus, it is our hope that this handbook will
introduce the reader to some of the basic but contentious discourses,
ideas and narratives that have shaped and influenced our understanding
of TOC today, and to situate these within the wider political context. We
hope to have provided the necessary tools to analyse and recognize the
idea and entity that is TOC. If we have achieved this, then we will have
contributed in some way to the ongoing debate that we very much hope
will continue.
Notes
1 Website, http://www.europarl.europa.eu/comparl/libe/elsj/zoom_in/291_en.htm#1
(accessed 5 July 2011).
2 It has many similarities with the UN’s definition and has incorporated many of its
elements.
3 Website, http://www.fbi.gov/about-us/investigate/organizedcrime/glossary
(accessed 5 July 2011).
4 Email correspondence with author.
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