Models of South-East Asian Organised Crime Drug Operations in Queensland
Tóm tắt
Từ khóa
Tài liệu tham khảo
Abele, G. (2004). Synthetic drugs trafficking in three European cities: major trends and the involvement of organized crime. Trends in Organized Crime, 8(1), 24–37.
Adler, P. (1985). Wheeling and dealing: an ethnography of an upper-level drug dealing and smuggling community. New York: Columbia University Press.
AFP (2008). Annual report 2007-2008. http://www.afp.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/89127/AFPAnrep2007-08.pdf . Accessed 10 March 2009.
Albanese, J. (2004). Organized crime in our times (4th edn.). New Jersey: Anderson.
Antonopolous, G. A., & Winterdyk, J. (2006). The smuggling of migrants in Greece: an examination of its social organization. European Journal of Criminology, 3(4), 439–461.
Australian Institute of Criminology. (2004). The worldwide fight against transnational organised crime: Australia. Canberra: Australian Institute of Criminology.
Beyer, L., Reid, G., & Crofts, N. (2001). Ethnic based differences in drug offending. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Criminology, 34(2), 169–181.
Bovenkerk, F., Siegel, D., & Zaitch, D. (2003). Organized crime and ethnic reputation manipulation. Crime, Law and Social Change, 39(1), 23.
Browne, D., Mason, M., & Murphy, R. (2003). Drug supply and trafficking: an overview. The Howard Journal, 42(4), 324–334.
Bruinsma, G., & Bernasco, W. (2004). Criminal groups and transnational illegal markets. Crime, Law and Social Change, 41(1), 79–94.
Bureau for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs (BINLEA) (2009). International Narcotics Control Strategy Report 2009. http://www.state.gov/p/inl/rls/nrcrpt/2009/ . Accessed 10 Aug 2009.
Caulkins, J. P., Gurga, B., & Little, C. (2009). Economic analysis of drug transaction ‘cycles’ described by incarcerated UK drug dealers. Global Crime, 10(1), 19.
Champion, D. (2006). Research methods for criminal justice and criminology (3rd ed.). New Jersey: Pearson Prentice Hall.
Chin, K., & Zhang, S. (2008). Snakeheads, mules and protective umbrellas: A review of current research on Chinese organized crime. Crime, Law and Social Change, 50(3), 177–195.
CMC. (2004). Organised crime markets in Queensland. Crime Bulletin Series, 6(1), 1–46.
Courakis, N. (2001). Financial crime today: Greece as a European case study. European Journal on Criminal Policy and Research, 9(2), 197–219.
Curtis, R. (1996). The war on drugs in Brooklyn, New York: Street-level drug markets and the tactical narcotics team. New York: Columbia University.
Curtis, R., & Wendel, T. (2000). Toward the development of a typology of illegal drug markets. Crime Prevention Studies, 11, 121–152.
Decker, S., & Chapman, M. (2008). Drug smugglers on drug smuggling: Lessons from the inside. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
Degenhardt, L., Conroy, E., Gilmour, S., & Collins, L. (2005). The effect of a reduction in heroin supply in Australia upon distribution and acquisitive crime. British Journal of Criminology, 45(1), 2–24.
Desroches, F. (2005). The crime that pays: drug trafficking and organized crime in Canada. Toronto: Canadian Scholars
Dixon, D., & Maher, L. (2002). Anh Hai: Policing, culture and social exclusion in a street heroin market. Policing and Society, 12(2), 93–110.
Edwards, A., & Gill, P. (2002). Crime as enterprise? The case of "transnational organised crime". Crime, Law and Social Change, 37(3), 202–223.
Edwards, A., & Levi, M. (2008). Researching the organization of serious crimes. Criminology & Criminal Justice, 8(4), 363–388.
Hall, R. (2004). Greed: the "Mr Asia" connection. Rowville (VIC): Five Mile.
Halstead, B. (1998). The use of models in the analysis of organized crime and development of policy. Transnational Organized Crime, 4(1), 1–24.
Janikowski, W. R., & Giacopassi, D. J. (1993). Pyrrhic images, dancing shadows, and flights of fancy: the drug courier profile as legal fiction. Journal of Contemporary Criminal Justice, 9(1), 60–69.
Joseph, J. (2006). Drug offenses, gender, ethnicity, and nationality: women in prison in England and Wales. The Prison Journal, 86(1), 140–157.
Keeble, H., & Hollington, K. (2008). Crack house. London: Simon & Schuster.
Lincoln, Y. S. (1995). Emerging criteria for quality in qualitative and interpretive research. Qualitative Inquiry, 1(3), 275–289.
Lyman, M., & Potter, G. (2007). Organized crime (4th edn.). New Jersey: Pearson.
Mackenzie, S. (2002). Organised crime and common transit networks. Trends and Issues in Crime and Criminal Justice, 233, 1–6.
Morselli, C. (2001). Structuring Mr Nice: Entrepreneurial opportunities and brokerage positioning in the cannabis trade. Crime, Law and Social Change, 35(3), 203–244.
Morselli, C. (2005). Contacts, opportunities, and criminal enterprise. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
Natarajan, M., & Belanger, M. (1998). Varieties of drug trafficking organizations: a typology of cases prosecuted in New York City. Journal of Drug Issues, 28(4), 1005–1026.
Natarajan, M., & Hough, M. (Eds.). (2000). Illegal drug markets: from research to prevention policy. New York: Criminal Justice.
Neuman, W. L. (2006). Social research methods: Qualitative and quantitative approaches (6th edn.). Boston: Pearson.
Noaks, L., & Wincup, E. (2004). Criminological research: Understanding qualitative methods. London: Sage.
Paoli, L. (2004). Italian organised crime: Mafia associations and criminal enterprises. Global Crime, 6(1), 19–31.
Parliamentary Joint Committee on the Australian Crime Commission (PJCACC). (2007). Inquiry into the future impact of serious and organised crime on Australian society. Canberra: Senate Printing Unit.
Patton, M. (2002). Qualitative research & evaluation methods (3rd edn.). Thousand Oaks (CA): Sage.
Pearson, G., & Hobbs, D. (2001). Middle market drug distribution. London: Home Office Research, Development and Statistics Directorate.
Reuter, P., & Haaga, J. (1989). The organization of high-level drug markets: an exploratory study. Santa Monica: RAND.
Robin, G. D. (1993). Inquisitive cops, investigative stops and drug courier hops: returning to the scene of the crime. Journal of Contemporary Criminal Justice, 9(1), 41–59.
Rudestam, K. E., & Newton, R. R. (2001). The method chapter. In K. E. Rudestam & R. R. Newton (Eds.), Surviving your dissertation: a comprehensive guide to content and process (pp. 75–101). California: Sage.
Ruggiero, V., & Khan, K. (2006). British South-Asian communities and drug supply networks in the UK: a qualitative study. The International Journal on Drug Policy, 17, 473–483.
Ruggiero, V., & Khan, K. (2007). The organization of drug supply: South Asian criminal enterprise in the UK. Asian Journal of Criminology, 2(2), 163–177.
Schloenhardt, A. (2009). Palermo in the Pacific: organised crime offences in the Asia Pacific region—preliminary report. Brisbane: University of Queensland.
Shaw, M. (2006). Drug trafficking and the development of organized crime in post-Taliban Afghanistan. In D. Buddenberg & W. A. Byrd (Eds.), Afghanistan’s drug industry: structure, functioning, dynamic, and implications for counter narcotics policy. UNODC: Kabul.
Soudijn, M., & Kleemans, E. (2009). Chinese organized crime and situational context: comparing human smuggling and synthetic drugs trafficking. Crime, Law and Social Change, 52(5), 457.
Thompson, T. (2008). Reefer men: the rise and fall of a billionaire drugs ring. London: Hodder & Stoughton.
Trochim, W. (2006). Qualitative validity. http://www.socialresearchmethods.net/kb/qualval.php . Accessed 1 June 2009.
Tunnell, K. (1993). Inside the drug trade: trafficking from the dealer’s perspective. Qualitative Sociology, 16(4), 361–381.
UNODC (2002). Results of a pilot survey of forty selected organized criminal groups in sixteen countries. New York: United Nations.
von Lampe, K. (2001). Not a process of enlightenment: the conceptual history of organized crime in Germany and the United States of America. Forum on Crime and Society, 1(2), 99–116.
von Lampe, K. (2003). The use of models in the study of organized crime. In Proceedings of the 2003 Conference of the European Consortium for Political Research (ECPR). Marburg: Free University Berlin.
von Lampe, K. (2005). Making the second step before the first: assessing organized crime. Crime, Law and Social Change, 42(4-5), 227.
Williams, P., & Godson, R. (2002). Anticipating organized and transnational crime. Crime, Law and Social Change, 37(4), 311–355.
Zaitch, D. (2002). Trafficking cocaine: Colombian drug entrepreneurs in the Netherlands. The Hague: Kluwer Law International.