Taking crime out of crime business |
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Authors: | Mark Findlay Nafis Hanif |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Internal Medicine, Mustafa Kemal University Medical Faculty, Hatay, Turkey;2. Department of Medical Biology and Genetics, Kahramanmaras Sutcu Imam University Medical Faculty, Kahramanmaras, Turkey;3. Thalassemia Diagnosis and Treatment Center, Antakya State Hospital, Hatay, Turkey;4. School of Health Sciences, Mustafa Kemal University, Hatay, Turkey;5. Department of Hematology, Mustafa Kemal University Medical Faculty, Hatay, Turkey;1. Department of Stem Cell Transplantation and Cellular Therapy, University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas, USA;2. Department of Microbiology & Immunology, and Department of Medicine, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York, USA |
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Abstract: | It is one thing to assert that conventional market analysis is critically useful in understanding criminal enterprise. It is more challenging to suggest that corrupt and compromised legal regulation interacts with other critical market variables to maximise market advantage for crime business in a similar manner to legitimate regulatory forces in their protection and enhancement of legitimate business enterprise. The central argument of this paper is that crime business mirrors other business forms when considered in terms of critical market variables, and that in particular regulatory forces when inverted from their original purposes can influence market conditions in the same ways desired from the legitimate regulatory form. The main research direction deriving from the analysis of regulatory influences over specific criminal enterprises is how do certain critical market forces essentially facilitate criminal enterprise as a market phenomenon. This paper suggests how through comparatively analysing nominated critical market forces in the context of lucrative and recurrent criminal enterprises, common business decision-making may be predicted and thereby controlled beyond a law enforcement paradigm. In fact, the paper argues that when perverted law enforcement regulation operates as an inter-connecting market characteristic then it can have a similar influence over illegitimate enterprise that law enforcement may provide legitimate business.By establishing a richer and more enterprise-oriented understanding of crucial market variables, it becomes possible to refine control strategies at critical entry and exit points in the operation of clandestine crime businesses. The paper will challenge a comparative theorising of what makes crime business a good business, and how normative distinctions between illegitimate markets are made less convincing when positioned against an analysis of the interaction of critical market variables. |
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