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Samenvatting

Selected issues: Organised Crime samenvatting (notities + slides)

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Geüpload op
20 december 2025
Aantal pagina's
140
Geschreven in
2025/2026
Type
Samenvatting

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Selected Issues: Organised Crime
Lecture 1: Concept & Definitions..............................................................................................2
Lecture 2: Research on organised crime: approaches & methods ............................................ 23
Lecture 3: Causes and facilitating factors of organised crime .................................................. 39
Lecture 4: Organized Crime Markets....................................................................................... 50
Lecture 5: Models of Organised Criminal Groups .................................................................... 78
Lecture 6: Organised crime policies ....................................................................................... 87
Lecture 7: The Crime-Terror Nexus ......................................................................................... 97
Lecture 8 ............................................................................................................................. 105
The Belgian synthetic drug market: social network analysis and financial crime scripting ....... 105
Forensic Intelligence, Organized Crime Networks & Disruption = how law enforcement better
disrupt networks ................................................................................................................. 111
Lecture 9: Administrative approach to organised crime: ARIEC Limburg ................................. 126




1

,Lecture 1: Concept & Definitions
1. Introduction
Main points:

1. Law enforcement is more than merely enforcing a rule/legal act.
o Phenomenon -> legislation -> enforcement?
• Police has to follow the rules, but they do more than enforcement
alone
• They have an impact on what politicians enact as law → they request
things, people,…
• This is the moment organized crime became a big thing → police
needed additional powers because we are up against an army of
criminals
▪ But what are we up against really? The big bad wolf? But how
many wolfs are there, what do they look like,…? We do not
know
▪ Bart de Wever: red pill (reference to ‘The Matrix’ = movie about
living in virtual reality) → if you take the blue pill, you see
things that you want to see, but it is not reality!
 In Antwerp (thanks to De Wever) they started to take
the red pill → you see buildings being used as
synthetic drug labs, illegal dumpings poisoning
water,…
 What government institution are criminals most
scared of? Tax administration!

2. The concept of organised crime is a social construct.
o Not a crime, but a criminal phenomenon.
• It is behavior that we agree is OC. Serious crime, at least punishable by
3 years of imprisonment
o Crimes vs. offenders.

3. Enforcement and policies difficult without a clear view on the problem: usefulness
of the concept ‘organised’?
o We have no idea what we are up against (see cartoon)




2

, - Early 20th century
o Political legitimacy
o Scientific legitimacy
- Controversial concept inconsistently incorporating two notions:
o Provision of illegal goods and services: drugs, human trafficking, weapons…
o Criminal organisation: people organize themselves and pose a threat to society
- Temporal mismatch
o United States: peak in the late 1960s and early 1970s
o Europe: much later
- Past 9/11
o Lost some momentum but still high on the agenda!


2. History of the concept
2.1. The American roots
- Probably first used in the 1896 (annual report of the NY Society for the Prevention of
Crime)
o Protected gambling and prostitution
o Illegal business dealings involving politicians, police officers, lawyers, etc.

- 1920s and 1930s
o Development of illegal markets due to Prohibition → for example: alcohol was
forbidden so criminals saw an opportunity to start illegal businesses to sell
alcohol
o Serious efforts to define and discuss OC by both academics and commentators
o No specific reference to separate associations of gangsters (yet) → Al Capone
was a gangster, but not connected to an organisation
o Often synonymous with ‘racketeering’ (i.e. extortion, predatory activities and
provision of illegal goods and services such as illegal gambling, counterfeit
documents and trafficking in drugs and liquor)
▪ If you have a shop and a criminal says ‘you have a nice shop, I wouldn’t
want anything happen to it, pay me 1000 dollars a month and I will ensure
nothing happens’ → if you said no, your shop was destroyed (extortion)

- ‘The Gang’ (Thrasher, 1927)
o First full scale treatment of OC → first assessment of OC
o No hard structures
o Links with the upper world (police, judges, lawyers…)
o Indispensable functions played by certain specialized persons/groups including
doctors, lawyers, politicians, etc.




3

, - Between 1929 and 1931
o First federal government attempt to study OC (Wickersham Commission)
o ‘What’ = more important than ‘Who’ (i.e. based on criminal law categories, not on
criminals)

- After Second World War (1945)
o Wickersham approach (i.e. ‘understanding of OC as a set of criminal
entrepreneurial activities with the frequent involvement of legal businesses and
state representatives’) abandoned
o ‘Who’ = more important than ‘What’
o From late 1940s onward, focus on foreign career criminals constituting well-
structured and powerful criminal organisations representing a threat to the
integrity of American society and politics
▪ Society gets the crime they deserve (Laccassagne)
• Why do these organisations exist? Why is it so easy to recruit people?
Because they are living in poverty, in dangerous neighbourhood,
unemployment, most children
• Bv: Brussel-Zuid: cleaned up the station, but where do these people
go to? Another place and this is when they recruited others

→ Alien, parasitical corporation

- New organisation-based approach (alien conspiracy) clearly enunciated by Kefauver
Senate Investigation Committee (1950)
o Italian mafia-centred view of OC (La Cosa Nostra)
o Remained official standpoint for almost three decades !
▪ It is selection: some communities were being overpoliced → ofcourse
you find something, but what about the other communities?
o Need for increased federal involvement in enforcement of gambling and drug
laws
o Federal Narcotics Bureau (later DEA) as major ‘moral entrepreneur’ of
organisation-based understanding of OC

- 1963 (Joe Valachi)
o Testifies before the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations (Cosa
Nostra)
▪ Because he was terrified of someone in jail
▪ They asked him questions, but leading
questions! Not open questions → they wanted
to confirm what they thought = confirmation
bias
o Enormous public impact → from then on: italian mafia became a major threat to
society according to people
o Merger of the two concepts of OC and ‘mafia’ fully accomplished



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