Chinese criminal entrepreneurs in Canada . Volume I / Alex Chung.

Title

Chinese criminal entrepreneurs in Canada . Volume I / Alex Chung.

Description

Title from PDF of title page (viewed, Oct. 7, 2019)
This book explores the historical origins, activities, and structure of the archetypal ‘new’ Asian criminal entrepreneurs in Canada, known as The Big Circle Boys (BCB). It traces their illegal immigration abroad from Guangzhou, the extent to which they are organised and violent, and what the future holds for them in Canada. The BCB’s organisational features are examined against theories and legislation of organised crime to understand how they compare to other criminal entities. For the first time, a unique glimpse is provided into the workings of an elusive cellular network comprised of BCB dai lo (bosses). Through interviews and official documents, their criminal undertakings and structural dimensions are pieced together to show how their interdependent and collaborative cells enabled them to form a dynamic criminal community. This book speaks to those interested in how a collective of ethnic-Chinese career criminals have replaced traditional criminal organisations in transnational criminal markets, particularly for scholars and students of social sciences disciplines.

Publisher

Palgrave Macmillan,

Date

Contributor

SpringerLink (Online service)

Relation

https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-030-05132-7

Format

1 online resource (xv, 340 p. : ill.)

Language

eng

Type

a

Access Rights

Publisher's Web site. Access restricted to the University of Catania community.

DOI

10.1007/978-3-030-05132-7 doi

ISBN

9783030051310 (hbk.)
9783030051327 (PDF ebook)
3030051323
9783030051310 (hbk.)

Series

Transnational crime, crime control and security
Transnational crime, crime control and security.

Files

2019_Book_ChineseCriminalEntrepreneursIn.pdf

Citation

Chung, Alex (Alex SH), “Chinese criminal entrepreneurs in Canada . Volume I / Alex Chung.,” Lex e-books - Collana, accessed November 25, 2024, https://epub.unict.it/omeka/items/show/363.