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Organized Crime as Institutional Cluster - Transition from Traditional to Informational Model in Ukraine

Organized Crime as Institutional Cluster - Transition from Traditional to Informational Model in Ukraine

of: Tetiana Melnychuk

Springer-Verlag, 2023

ISBN: 9783031395321 , 151 Pages

Format: PDF

Copy protection: DRM

Windows PC,Mac OSX,Windows PC,Mac OSX Apple iPad, Android Tablet PC's

Price: 42,79 EUR



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Organized Crime as Institutional Cluster - Transition from Traditional to Informational Model in Ukraine


 

From the perspective of institutionalism and theories of clusters, this book provides a concept of organized crime as an institutional cluster in contrast to the concept of multiple offences, associated with organized criminal groups or/and criminal organizations. 
The book offers shifts in the methodology of organized crime analysis and extrapolates the tools of cluster modelling - successfully approbated in the social and economic sciences as a method for the organization of spatially localized systems - to the criminological field. Such an approach gives a fresh view of organized crime essence and contributes to the deeper and more sophisticated understanding of organized crime modus operandi, as well as its influence on the social landscape.
Organized crime in today's world is increasingly moving from rigidly structured entities to decentralization with unclear, blurred edges and a hybrid structure, which is dictated by the rationality of adapting to social change, including the emergence of new widespread demands for illegal goods and services, new ways to evade social control, the prevalence of poly-criminal activities, the involvement in general digitalization, and so on. Specifically, the study is focused on the evolution of organized crime models in Ukraine considering the socioeconomic, political, and ideological background. Organized crime in Ukraine has gone through numerous transitions, encompassing professionally or traditionally organized criminal groups (the so-called community of 'thieves in law'), functional racketeering groups, businessmen who accumulated their initial capital through the shadow economy, bureaucratically constructed groups from former official vertically powerful ruling circles, networks of personal or professional connections of the Soviet special services, oligarchic-clan pyramidal structures and amorphous delocalized cyber entities.
This book also gives a broad picture of contemporary criminal clusters in Ukraine and an assessment of a full-scale war's impact. Russia's invasion on 24 February 2022 and massive hostilities provoked a turbulent situation for organized crime, resulting in the breaking of former criminal ties and the degradation of certain criminal and corrupt practices. At the same time, the war and the martial law regime created opportunities for organized crime in Ukraine to develop new illegal markets and relocate existing ones.





Tetiana Melnychuk is a criminologist and holds the position of Associate Professor at the Department of Criminal Procedure, Detective, and Search Activities at the National University 'Odesa Law Academy' (Ukraine). She is a Visiting Researcher at the Centre for European and International Criminal Law Studies of the University of Osnabrück (Germany) for 2022-2024. Prof. Melnychuk has a strong academic background and experience in fundamental and policy-oriented research, analytical studies and legal advising. Her Ph.D. was obtained in 2009 by defending the thesis 'Organized Forms of Criminal Activity in Foreign Economic Relations'. She is a research fellow of the Odesa Organized Crime and Corruption Research Centre (Ukraine). She is also a member of the Ukrainian Bar Association and has an individual practice of law as a certified Attorney in Ukraine. Her scientific activity is predominantly focused on the research of organized crime, economic delinquency, and corruption; modern strategies and policies of crime prevention; human rights in criminal justice from criminological, victimological, substantive criminal law and procedural criminal law perspectives.