Unisa Institutional Repository

Defining organised crime: a comparative analysis

Show full item record

Title: Defining organised crime: a comparative analysis
Author: Lebeya, Seswantsho Godfrey
Abstract: The most challenging and spoken criminal phenomenon today is indisputably organised crime. It is a crime that both the general public, business community, commentators, researchers, scholars, journalists, writers, politicians, prosecutors, jurists and presiding officials debate with different interpretation and understanding of the concept as well as the manifestation of the phenomena. Debates on the subject have seen the dawn of rival terminologies of organised crime and crimes that are organised. While the United Nations has not assisted the nations in finding a definition of what organised crime is, the confusion has spread throughout the globe and South Africa has not been spared the pandemonium. The objective of this study is to comparatively assess the present understanding and setup in South Africa in comparison with Italy, Tanzania and the United States of America, identify the root causes of the confusion and find possible remedies to liberate the situation. The research concludes with the findings and recommendations.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10500/6547
Date: 2012-09
Citation:


Files in this item

Files Size Format View
thesis_lebeya_sg.pdf 2.592Mb PDF View/Open

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show full item record

Search UnisaIR


Browse

My Account

Statistics