216 Pages 3 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    216 Pages 3 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Illicit business is big business. It covers a diverse range of activities from money laundering, drug trafficking and human trafficking through to the manufacture of counterfeit goods and the multiple activities in informal and shadow economies. This book introduces the world of illegal business.

    The authors contextualise the evolution in practices of illegal business around the world, highlighting the importance of organised crime, shadow economies, and informal sectors. Incorporating scholarly insights with real world examples, the book provides a much-needed business and economics analysis of a subject that is otherwise dominated by criminologists.

    With a range of case studies, this book provides a global approach that will be valuable reading for students seeking to understand the business of crime.

    1. Framing Illicit Business 2. A History of Illicit Business 3. Illicit Business, Informal Sectors and Shadow Economies 4. Illicit Business, Money Laundering and the Crime Terror Nexus 5. The Drugs Trafficking Business 6. The Arms Trafficking Business 7. Kidnapping and Human Trafficking 8. Illicit Business and the Environment 9. State-Led Illicit Business 10. Digital Illicit Business 11. Conclusion

    Biography

    Anthea McCarthy-Jones is Senior Lecturer in Business at the University of New South Wales, Australia.

    Mark Turner is Honorary Professor of Business at the University of New South Wales, Australia.

    "Reflecting on illicit business is important for detecting and preventing criminal entrepreneurship. This book applies the terminology from regular business to understand motives, opportunities, and willingness to operate on the wrong side of the law. Simply stated, you cannot fight something you don’t understand, and you cannot fight someone you don’t understand. That is why this book is so important." Petter Gottschalk, Professor Emeritus, Department of Leadership and Organizational Behaviour, Norwegian Business School