TY - JOUR
T1 - BEYOND CONVENTIONAL BOUNDARIES: Examining the Intricate Interplay between Corruption and Organized Crime in the Global South
AU - Kupatadze, Alexander
N1 - Funding Information:
Dr Alexander Kupatadze is Associate Professor at King's College London. Prior to joining King's College, Dr Kupatadze taught at the School of International Relations, St Andrews University. He held the postdoctoral positions at George Washington University (2010–11), Oxford University (2012–13) and Princeton University (2013–14). His research specialization is organized crime, corruption, and informal politics. His research has been funded by European Union, British Academy, Harry Frank Guggenheim Foundation, and other donors.
Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2023.
PY - 2023/9
Y1 - 2023/9
N2 - According to conventional wisdom, organized criminal activity is perpetrated primarily by non-state, private actors who are occasionally [or not] protected by corrupt government officials. From this perspective, a hard distinction is made between those who provide protection to criminals (e.g., politicians or law enforcement officials) and the criminals themselves (e.g., smugglers or producers of counterfeit goods). It further treats the involvement of state-affiliated actors as a by-product of corruption in public office, rather than, in some places, a feature of it. This article builds on emerging evidence that state representatives play a far more direct role in supervising, organizing and sometimes managing crime than assumed in the majority of the literature. It shows that there are inherent theoretical, policy-level biases that misguide the analytical thinking about organized crime in the Global South, and argues that there is a need to reconsider existing approaches to develop more accommodative definitions of organized crime.
AB - According to conventional wisdom, organized criminal activity is perpetrated primarily by non-state, private actors who are occasionally [or not] protected by corrupt government officials. From this perspective, a hard distinction is made between those who provide protection to criminals (e.g., politicians or law enforcement officials) and the criminals themselves (e.g., smugglers or producers of counterfeit goods). It further treats the involvement of state-affiliated actors as a by-product of corruption in public office, rather than, in some places, a feature of it. This article builds on emerging evidence that state representatives play a far more direct role in supervising, organizing and sometimes managing crime than assumed in the majority of the literature. It shows that there are inherent theoretical, policy-level biases that misguide the analytical thinking about organized crime in the Global South, and argues that there is a need to reconsider existing approaches to develop more accommodative definitions of organized crime.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85163787069&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/004382002311788
DO - 10.1177/004382002311788
M3 - Article
SN - 0043-8200
VL - 186
SP - 747
EP - 775
JO - WORLD AFFAIRS
JF - WORLD AFFAIRS
IS - 3
ER -