Organised crime in the UK
Laurie Taylor discusses organised crime in the UK - the move from the underworld to the mainstream. Also, the Italian Camorra.
Organised crime in the UK - how has it changed? Professor Dick Hobbs, joins Laurie Taylor, to discuss his work on 'Lush Life', a rich, ethnographic study into 'Dogtown', a composite of several overlapping neighbourhoods in East London. Looking behind the clichéd notions of criminal firms and underworlds, he finds that activity which was once the preserve of professional criminals has now been normalised. He invites us to consider whether or not the very idea of organised crime has become outdated in a predatory, post industrial world in which many fight, by illegal as well as legal means, to survive on the margins. Also, the presence and activities of Mafia style crime both in Italy, as well as in the UK. Dr Felia Allum, a Lecturer in Italian History and Politics, discusses how Italian organised crime functions outside its territory of origin. Revised repeat.
Producer: Jayne Egerton
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Felia Allum
Lecturer in Italian politics and history at the University of Bath
Find out more about Felia Allum
Paper: ‘Italian Organized Crime in the UK’
in Policing: A Journal of Policy and Practice
Policing (2012) 6 (4): 354-359.
doi: 10.1093/police/pas025
Dick Hobbs
Professor of Sociology and Director of the Criminology Centre at the University of Essex
Find out more about Dick Hobbs
Lush Life: Constructing Organized Crime in the UK
Publisher: OUP Oxford
ISBN-10: 0199668280
ISBN-13: 978-0199668281
Broadcasts
- Wed 6 Feb 201316:00BBC Radio 4
- Mon 11 Feb 201300:15BBC Radio 4
- Wed 26 Jun 201916:00BBC Radio 4
- Mon 1 Jul 201900:15BBC Radio 4
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