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8 J. Contemp. Crim. Just. iii (1992)

handle is hein.journals/jccj8 and id is 1 raw text is: 





                    Journal of Contemporary Criminal Justice  iii
                               Vol. 8 * No. 1 * February 1992



EDITORIAL COMMENT

   One  of the most popular and powerful images of crime in American
society is organized crime. The Mafia (La Cosa  Nostra) is a favorite
Hollywood  theme perpetuated by movies like the Godfather 1, 11, and III
and Goodfellas. This traditional view was featured in the President's Crime
Commission  report (1967) and Donald Cressey's influential Theft of a
Nation (1969). It was sponsored by a number of different events including
the discovery of a meeting of organized crime leaders in Apalachin, New
York  (1957) and the testimony of La Cosa Nostra  member,  Joseph
Valachi before the U.S. Senate in 1963. These common threads formed a
portrait of an omnipotent, national syndicate, the Mafia.
   However, there is a considerable controversy over how organized crime
should be defined. The distinguishing feature of Cressey's bureaucratic
model is the insistence that La Cosa Nostra is a nationwide conspiracy under
the control of the various families across the country operating under a
confederation or commission. Thus law enforcement officials believe, the
best method of controlling organized crime is to apprehend and prosecute
family members, especially the bosses.
   According to several scholars (most notably Joseph Albini), organized
crime does not follow a unified, national conspiracy. Instead, crime bodies
are independent, local entities often centered in major cities with no formal
national ties. Rather, it follows an informal, loosely structured, open
system. Structure is largely determined by function, not rational bureau-
cratic action.
   The articles contained in this volume add to the attempt to accurately
define organized crime as a criminological concept. The articles presented
by Haller, Rogovin and  Martens, and Kelly were submitted under the
sponsorship of the International Association for the Study of Organized
Crime.  The  work by Potter and Gaines deals with an ignored issue in
organized crime - how it operates in rural areas of the country. I thank these
scholars for their contributions and Professor George E. Rush for the
opportunity to develop this issue.
   Professor Pat Ryan  of Long Island University/C.W. Post deserves
special thanks for his work in the preparation of this volume. We also
express our gratitude to Dorothy Fields of the School of Justice Adminis-
tration at the University of Louisville for her efforts in preparing the
manuscripts for publication.






                                     Gennaro F. Vito, Ph.D.,Professor
              School of Justice Administration, University of Louisville

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