This article develops a simple but general criminal decision framework in which individual crime and organized crime are coexisting alternatives to a potential offender. It enables us to endogenize the size of a criminal organization and explore interactive relationships among sizes of criminal organization, the crime rate, and the government's law enforcement strategies. We show that the method adopted to allocate the criminal organization's payoffs and the extra benefit provided by the criminal organization play crucial roles in an individual's decision to commit a crime and the way in which he or she commits that crime. The two factors also jointly determine the market structure for crime and the optimal law enforcement strategy to be ad...
We study a simple law-enforcement model where the organizational structure of a criminal group is en...
This Article provides theoretical and empirical support for the claim that organized crime competes ...
We analyze an oligopoly model in which differentiated criminal organizations globally compete on cri...
This is a pre-copyedited, author-produced version of an article accepted for publication in Review ...
In this paper, we take an organizational view of organized crime. In particular, we study the organ...
We analyse an oligopoly model in which differentiated criminal organizations compete on criminal act...
What organized crime is and how it can be prevented are two of the key questions in both organized c...
The legal and economic analysis presented here empirically tests the theoretical framework advanced ...
This article uses empirical data from the Dutch Organized Crime Monitor to give empirical insight in...
This study aims to illuminate the processes that make individuals engage in organized crime activiti...
The economic theory of crime considers criminal a rational individual, maximiser (that is, inclined ...
We analyze an oligopoly model in which differentiated criminal or-ganizations globally compete on cr...
We explore how the idea of partial organization can provide insights in the study of organized crime...
A framework is developed in which the formation of gangs--the criminal market structure--is endogeno...
Abstract. Crime is an economically relevant activity. It may represent a mechanism of wealth distrib...
We study a simple law-enforcement model where the organizational structure of a criminal group is en...
This Article provides theoretical and empirical support for the claim that organized crime competes ...
We analyze an oligopoly model in which differentiated criminal organizations globally compete on cri...
This is a pre-copyedited, author-produced version of an article accepted for publication in Review ...
In this paper, we take an organizational view of organized crime. In particular, we study the organ...
We analyse an oligopoly model in which differentiated criminal organizations compete on criminal act...
What organized crime is and how it can be prevented are two of the key questions in both organized c...
The legal and economic analysis presented here empirically tests the theoretical framework advanced ...
This article uses empirical data from the Dutch Organized Crime Monitor to give empirical insight in...
This study aims to illuminate the processes that make individuals engage in organized crime activiti...
The economic theory of crime considers criminal a rational individual, maximiser (that is, inclined ...
We analyze an oligopoly model in which differentiated criminal or-ganizations globally compete on cr...
We explore how the idea of partial organization can provide insights in the study of organized crime...
A framework is developed in which the formation of gangs--the criminal market structure--is endogeno...
Abstract. Crime is an economically relevant activity. It may represent a mechanism of wealth distrib...
We study a simple law-enforcement model where the organizational structure of a criminal group is en...
This Article provides theoretical and empirical support for the claim that organized crime competes ...
We analyze an oligopoly model in which differentiated criminal organizations globally compete on cri...