I: Trouble; II: From Mafia to Cosa Nostra; III: War, Peace, and Peaceful Coexistence; IV: Educating the Public; V: Demand, Supply, and Profit; VI: The Structural Skeleton; VII: Origins of the Authority Structure; VIII: The Code; IX: Some Functions of the Code; X: Shifting Patterns of Authority and Recruitment; XI: Corruption of the Law-Enforcement and Political Systems; XII: Search, Destroy, and Appease
The late Donald R. Cressey was professor of sociology at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and served as organized-crime consultant to the President's Commission on Law Enforcement and Administration of Justice. Educated in Minnesota, Iowa, and Indiana, he was dean of the College of Letters and Science at Santa Barbara, Professor of Sociology and chairman of the department of anthropology-sociology at UCLA, visiting professor in the Institute of Criminology at Cambridge University, and in the law faculty of the University of Oslo. James Finckenauer is the former editor of Trends in Organized Crime.
-This book is the most thorough and certainly the most analytical
account of organized crime yet published. Although written
principally as a trade-book, the author brings his usual
scholarship and high standards to his task. The book is free of
cheap sensationalism and bizarre anecdotes which sometimes blight
work on this subject. As the title indicates, Cressey investigates
the structure and operations of organized crime and, therefore,
gives us one of the few sociological accounts of what may be
America's biggest business.- --Frank R. Scarpitti, Social Forces
-This book is a description and analysis of the Mafia or Cosa
Nostra in this country as a nationwide, organized criminal cartel
and confederation which is increasingly moving in to -own- and
corrupt legitimate business and government.... [A] very useful
book.- --Richard R. Myers, American Sociological Review -[Professor
Cressey's] material on the operation of organized crime is
fascinating.- --Gerard Evans, International Affairs (Royal
Institute of International Affairs 1944-)
"This book is the most thorough and certainly the most analytical
account of organized crime yet published. Although written
principally as a trade-book, the author brings his usual
scholarship and high standards to his task. The book is free of
cheap sensationalism and bizarre anecdotes which sometimes blight
work on this subject. As the title indicates, Cressey investigates
the structure and operations of organized crime and, therefore,
gives us one of the few sociological accounts of what may be
America's biggest business." --Frank R. Scarpitti, Social Forces
"This book is a description and analysis of the Mafia or Cosa
Nostra in this country as a nationwide, organized criminal cartel
and confederation which is increasingly moving in to "own" and
corrupt legitimate business and government.... [A] very useful
book." --Richard R. Myers, American Sociological Review "[Professor
Cressey's] material on the operation of organized crime is
fascinating." --Gerard Evans, International Affairs (Royal
Institute of International Affairs 1944-)
"This book is the most thorough and certainly the most analytical
account of organized crime yet published. Although written
principally as a trade-book, the author brings his usual
scholarship and high standards to his task. The book is free of
cheap sensationalism and bizarre anecdotes which sometimes blight
work on this subject. As the title indicates, Cressey investigates
the structure and operations of organized crime and, therefore,
gives us one of the few sociological accounts of what may be
America's biggest business." --Frank R. Scarpitti, Social Forces
"This book is a description and analysis of the Mafia or Cosa
Nostra in this country as a nationwide, organized criminal cartel
and confederation which is increasingly moving in to "own" and
corrupt legitimate business and government.... [A] very useful
book." --Richard R. Myers, American Sociological Review "[Professor
Cressey's] material on the operation of organized crime is
fascinating." --Gerard Evans, International Affairs (Royal
Institute of International Affairs 1944-)
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