The legislative recreation of RICO: Reinforcing the ``myth'' of organized crime

被引:0
作者
William R. Geary
机构
[1] Widener University,
来源
Crime, Law and Social Change | 2002年 / 38卷
关键词
Diffusion Process; Content Analysis; Organize Crime; Historical Event; International Relation;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
This paper uses historical content analysis to examine the implementation ofthe Racketeer Influenced Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO). It is argued thatthe historical events leading to the definition of organized crime as an alienconspiracy still affect RICO's use some 30 years after its passage. This paper applies state-centered theory to the theoretical frameworks of sociology of knowledge and innovation diffusion. This approach is used to relate the current implementation and controversy of RICO to the alien conspiracy view. Thought of in this context, legal implementation is the result of a knowledge creation and diffusion process. This paper demonstrates how one knowledge diffusionprocess (the acceptance of organized crime as a national conspiracy in 1970) leads to a new knowledge diffusion process (the use of RICO).
引用
收藏
页码:311 / 356
页数:45
相关论文
共 7 条
[1]  
Fried D. J.(1988)Rationalizing Criminal Forfeiture The Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology 79 328-436
[2]  
Geary W. R.(2000)The Creation of RICO: Law as a Knowledge Diffusion Process Crime, Law & Social Change 33 329-367
[3]  
Greek C.(1991)Is This the End of RICO? Or Only the Beginning?: The Ongoing Debate Over the Expanded Use of Criminal and Civil RICO Free Inquiry in Creative Sociology 19 11-21
[4]  
Liddick D.(1999)The Enterprise ‘Model’ of Organized Crime: Assessing Theoretical Propositions Justice Quarterly 16 403-430
[5]  
Lynch G. E.(1987)RICO: The Crime of Being a Criminal, Parts I & II Colombia Law Review 87 661-744
[6]  
Skocpol T.(1980)Political Responses to Capitalist Crises: Neo-Marxist Theories of the State and the Case of the New Deal Politics and Society 10 155-202
[7]  
Smith D. C.(1976)Mafia: the Prototypical Alien Conspiracy Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 423 75-88