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Violence and illegal economic activity: a deconstruction

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Abstract

Obviously there is nothing new about humans using violence as a tool to advance their economic, political and social interests. There is no lack of quick and superficially convincing reasons on offer, reflecting the political agenda of those doing the offering. However sensible explanations of complex social phenomena are inevitably messy. Rather than yielding absolute certainty, they can at best indicate tendencies constrained by circumstances that are subject to dramatic change through random shocks of both exogenous and endogenous origin. This paper examines the possible role played by violence in contemporary illegal-market activity in an effort to clear up definitional ambiguities and highlight the underlying logic or lack thereof in frequent claims about a close association between earning, spending, saving or investing of ill-gotten gains and any propensity that participants might have to advance or defend their economic interests by violent means. It concludes that the links are at best tenuous and confined only to marginal instances that are usually explicable by the broader social, political and cultural context rather than anything inherent in the logic of these markets.

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Notes

  1. On this issue see R. T. Naylor [1]

  2. On these issues one of the best treatments is in Michael Woodiwiss [2]. See also the excellent survey by Lawrence Friedman [3]

  3. This is explained in detail in R. T. Naylor [4].

  4. These issues are examined in R. T. Naylor [5]

  5. For details see R. T. Naylor [6]

  6. This was a central theme of Peter Reuter [7].

  7. One of the most graphic works is Herbert Ashbury [8]. It bears little resemblance to the recent Hollywood thriller of the same name.

  8. Harry Anslinger, head of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics, and a former deputy director of the agency in charge of enforcing the alcohol ban, later insisted that the presumed epidemic of booze and drugs was the work of “the Grand Council of the Mafia, with its plan for an international cartel that controlled every phase of criminal activity.” See Harry Anslinger and Will Oursler [9]. He claimed that by the 1930s the Mafia had taken over from the Chinese the business of supplying America with opiates.

  9. See William Marsden and Julian Sher [10]

References

  1. Naylor, R. T. (2003). Predators, Parasites or Free-Market Pioneers? In M. Beare (Ed.), Critical Reflections on Transnational Organized Crime, Money Laundering and Corruption. Toronto: Univeristy of Toronto Press.

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  2. Woodiwiss, M. (2001). Organized Crime and American Power. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.

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  3. Friedman, L. (1993). Crime and Punishment in American History. New York: Basic Books.

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  4. Naylor, R. T. (2003). Towards a general theory of profit-driven crime. British Journal of Criminology, 43, 81–101.

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  5. Naylor, R. T. (2004). The Underworld of Ivory. Crime, Law & Social Change 42, 261–295.

  6. Naylor, R. T. (2004). Wages of Crime: Black Markets, Illegal Finance and the Underworld Economy, Chap. 3. Cornell University Press and McGill-Queen’s University Press: Ithaca.

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  7. Reuter, P. (1983). Pioneering, Disorganized Crime: The Economics of the Visible Hand. Boston: MIT.

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  8. Ashbury, H. (1927). Classic The Gangs of New York. New York: Knopf.

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  9. Anslinger, H., & Oursler, W. (1962). The Murderers: the Story of the Narcotics Gangs. New York: Straus & Cudahy.

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  10. Marsden, W., & Sher, J. (2003). The Road to Hell: How the Biker Gangs Are Conquering Canada. Toronto: Knopf.

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Naylor, R.T. Violence and illegal economic activity: a deconstruction. Crime Law Soc Change 52, 231–242 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10611-009-9198-9

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10611-009-9198-9

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