Este módulo es un recurso para los catedráticos 

 

Referencias

 
  • Adler, Patricia A. (1985). Wheeling and Dealing: An Ethnography of an Upper-Level Drug Dealing and Smuggling Community. New York: Columbia University Press.  
  • Albanese, Jay S. (1982). What Lockheed and La Cosa Nostra Have in Common: The Effect of Ideology on Criminal Justice PolicyCrime & Delinquency, vol. 28, 211–232. 
  • Albanese, Jay S. (2015). Organized Crime: From the Mob to Transnational Organized Crime. Routledge. 
  • Antonopoulos, Georgios A. (2009). Are the ‘Others’ Coming? Evidence on Alien Conspiracy from Three Illegal Markets in GreeceCrime, Law and Social Change, vol. 52, 475–93. 
  • Arsovska, Jana and Felia Allum (2014). Introduction: Women and Transnational Organized CrimeTrends in Organized Crime, vol. 17, 1-18. 
  • Barker, Thomas. (2014). Biker Gangs and Transnational Organized Crime. Routledge. 
  • Bassiouni, M. Cherif (1990). Effective National and International Action against Organized Crime and Terrorist Criminal ActivitiesEmory International Law Review, vol. 4, 9-42. 
  • Bidgood, Jess (2012). Girlfriend of Crime Boss Gets 8-Year Prison Sentence. The New York Times, 12 de junio. 
  • Block, Alan A. (1979). The Snowman Cometh: Coke in Progressive New YorkCriminology, vol. 17, 75–99. 
  • Blom, Martine and Roel Jennissen (2014). The Involvement of Different Ethnic Groups in Various Types of Crime in the Netherlands.European Journal of Criminal Policy & Research, vol. 20, 51–72. 
  • Bovenkerk, Frank, Dina Siegel, and Damian Zaitch (2003). Organized Crime and Ethnic Reputation ManipulationCrime, Law and Social Change, vol. 39, 23. 
  • Calder, James D. (1995). Mafia Women in Non-FictionEn J.Albanese, ed., Contemporary Issues in Organized Crime. Willow Tree Press. 
  • Carpenter, Teresa (1993). Mob Girl. New York: Zebra Books. 
  • De Ruyver, Brice, Gert Vermeulen, Tom Vander Beken, eds. (2002). Strategies of the EU and the US in Combating Transnational Organized CrimeMaklu. 
  • Europol (2017). Serious and Organised Crime Threat Assessment. European Police Office. 
  • Finckenauer, James O. (2005). Problems of Definition: What is Organized Crime? Trends in Organized Crime, vol. 8, 63-83. 
  • Hagan, Frank E. (1983). The Organized Crime Continuum: A Further Specification of a New Conceptual ModelCriminal Justice Review, vol. 8, 52–57. 
  • Ianni, Francis A.J. with Elizabeth Reuss-Ianni (1973). A Family Business: Kinship and Social Control in Organized Crime. New York: New American Library. 
  • Kegö, Walter, Erik Leijonmarck, and Alexandru Molcean, eds. (2011). Organized Crime and the Financial Crisis: Recent Trends in the Baltic Sea Region. Stockholm: Institute for Security and Development Policy. 
  • Maltz, Michael (1985). On Defining Organized CrimeEn Alexander, H. and Caiden, G., eds. The Politics and Economics of Organized Crime. Lexington Books. 
  • Oficina de las Naciones Unidas contra la Droga y el Delito (UNODC) (2004). Convención de las Naciones Unidas contra la Delincuencia Organizada Transnacional y sus Protocolos. Viena: UNODC.  
  • Oficina de las Naciones Unidas contra la Droga y el Delito (UNODC) (2006). Travaux Préparatoires de las Negociaciones para la Elaboración de la Convención de las Naciones Unidas contra la Delincuencia Organizada Transnacional y sus Protocolos. Viena: UNODC.  
  • Oficina de las Naciones Unidas contra la Droga y el Delito (UNODC) (2010). The Globalization of Crime: A Transnational Organized Crime Threat AssessmentVienna: UNODC.  
  • Pizzini-Gambetta, Valerie (2014). Organized Crime: The Gender Constraints of Illegal MarketsEn R. Gartner and B. McCarthy, eds. The Oxford Handbook of Gender, Sex, and Crime. Oxford University Press. 
  • Pontell, Henry N. and Kitty Calavita (1993). White-Collar Crime in the Savings and Loan ScandalThe Annals, vol. 525, 39. 
  • Reski, Petra (2012). The Honored Society: the History of Italy’s Most Powerful Mafia. New York: Nation Books. 
  • San, Marion van (2011). The Appeal of “Dangerous” Men: On the Role of Women in Organized CrimeTrends in Organized Crime, vol. 14, 281-97. 
  • Shaw, Mark y Luke Lee Skywalker (2017). Gangs, Violence and the Role of Women and Girls: Emerging themes and policy and programme options drawn from interviews with female gang members in Cape Town. Global Initiative against Organized Crime.  
  • Siegel, Dina and Frank Bovenkerk (2000). Crime and Manipulation of Identity among Russian-Speaking Immigrants in the NetherlandsJournal of Contemporary Criminal Justice, vol. 16, 424-444. 
  • Smith, Dwight C. (1980). Paragons, Pariahs, and Pirates: A Spectrum-Based Theory of Enterprise. Crime & Delinquency, vol. 26, 358-386. 
  • Soudijn, Melvin R.J. and Edward R. Kleemans (2009). Chinese Organized Crime and Situational Context: Comparing Human Smuggling and Synthetic Drugs TraffickingCrime, Law and Social Change, vol. 52, 457-474.  
  • Tusikov, Natasha (2012). Mortgage Fraud and Organized Crime in CanadaTrends in Organized Crime, vol. 11, 301-308.  
  • U.S. Senate Committee on Government Operations Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations (1963). Organized Crime and Illicit Traffic in Narcotics: Hearings Part I. 88th Congress, 1st session. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office. 
  • Van de Bunt, Henk, Siegel, Dina, and ZaitchDamián (2014). The Social Embeddedness of Organized Crime. The Oxford Handbook of Organized Crime. Oxford University Press. 
  • van Dijk, Jan (2008). The World of Crime. Sage Publications. 
  • Viano, Emilio C., ed. (2017). Cybercrime, Organized Crime, and Societal Responses: International ApproachesBerlin: Springer. 
 
Siguiente: Ejercicios
Volver al inicio