1st Edition

The Criminology of Carlo Morselli - Part II

Edited By David Décary-Hétu, Rémi Boivin Copyright 2024
150 Pages
by Routledge

150 Pages
by Routledge

150 Pages
by Routledge

The second of two volumes, this book about the criminology of Carlo Morselli includes a diversity of contributions that study the social inter-dependence of criminal phenomena. It presents various studies on the importance and impact of social ties on offenders, victims and the social response to crime. The idea that social relationships are central to the understanding of human phenomena draws... Read more

Introduction: The criminology of Carlo Morselli II

David Décary-Hétu and Rémi Boivin

1. Lawyers as money laundering enablers? An evolving and contentious relationship

Michael Levi

2. Network analysis for financial crime risk assessment: the case study of the gambling division in Malta

Maria Jofre

3. Taking care of everyone’s business: interpreting Sicilian Mafia embedment through spatial network analysis

Michele Battisti, Andrea Mario Lavezzi and Roberto Musotto

4. Criminal nomads: The role of multiple memberships in the criminal collaboration network between Hells Angels MC and Bandidos MC

Hernan Mondani and Amir Rostami

5. When encryption fails: a glimpse behind the curtain of synthetic drug trafficking networks

Melvin R.J. Soudijn, Irma J. Vermeulen and Wouter P.E. van der Leest

6. The intangible benefits of criminal mentorship

Frédéric Ouellet, Martin Bouchard and Valérie Thomas

Biography

David Décary-Hétu is Associate Professor at the School of Criminology of the Université de Montréal, Canada. Through his innovative approach, Prof. Décary-Hétu studies how offenders adopt and use technologies, and how that shapes the regulation of offenses, as well as how researchers can study offenders and offenses.

Rémi Boivin is Associate Professor at the School of Criminology of the Université de Montréal, Canada. Prof. Boivin’ focus on crime analysis led him to the study of co-offending and mobility, for which he used social network perspectives and techniques. His doctoral dissertation was co-supervised by Prof. Carlo Morselli.