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enlarge | Author: Misha Glenny Publisher: Knopf Category: Book
List Price: $27.95 Buy New: $16.14 You Save: $11.81 (42%)
New (38) Used (10) from $15.00
Avg. Customer Rating: 24 reviews Sales Rank: 7307
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 400 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.8 Dimensions (in): 9.5 x 6 x 1.4
ISBN: 1400044111 Dewey Decimal Number: 364.106 EAN: 9781400044115 ASIN: 1400044111
Publication Date: April 8, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Customer Reviews:
McMafia August 22, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
For innocent people, like me, this is a rude awakening of the magnitude of crime there is. As the economies globalize, so is organized crime. What fascinated me about this book is why and how the criminal activities flourish. In business, when a market gap is discovered (need or demand) enterprises fulfill the gap with a product or service. There is no different for the criminals. In short the entrepreneurs play by the legal rules, where the criminal-entrepreneurs (and they are entrepreneurs) play by any rule or no rules at all. Prostitution or drugs, to name a few, are in demand so a criminal organization will fill that need. What is tragic is that the market gaps are created by us. Yes, you and me. Either through our governments' actions and laws, such as taxing excessively a product or prohibiting it. Or, by some of us that demand illegal products. The even darker side of all this, is that the criminals acquire such vast amounts of money, that buying entire governments, or branches of governments is a piece of cake. So, with globalization, how long will it be before most governments are run by the criminal element? A new world order? A la Columbia, and soon to be a Mexico? Scary and real. This book is worth reading.
Where are the european mafias ? August 3, 2008 1 out of 11 found this review helpful
In his account of globalized crime, the author forgot to give a fair description of the european mafias. Where are the British, French, Spanish, German mafias ? The sample selected by the author is incomplete and biased.
Vicious, Lucrative, Corrupt, and Global July 25, 2008 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
You sponsor organized crime. There isn't a thing you can do to stop. These are among the dismaying messages of _McMafia: A Journey Through the Global Criminal Underworld_ (Knopf) by Misha Glenny. A big book with an extremely broad, world-wide vision of the latest in global criminality, it presents a daunting picture of lucrative and lethal crime in China, Serbia, Chechnya, Columbia, Israel, Russia, and all over the place. The U.S., the land where Don Corleone and his family prospered, gets surprisingly little coverage as a scene of crimes, but that does not keep it from playing a role all over the globe. Let's say (for the sake of argument) that you are an American who doesn't hire illegal foreign workers and never does illegal drugs and never launders money, so you think that gets you off the hook. Not quite. Do you use a cell phone? If so, most likely it contains coltan, a mined compound that efficiently conducts electricity at very high temperatures, and which comes from the Democratic Republic of Congo, so you are tapped into mine pillaging and organized crime there. There are countless other examples given here, but most important is what the American government and other governments are doing. They are interested in prohibition, criminalization, and interdiction, but with the lifting of restrictions on free movement of capital (Glenny blames Reagan and Thatcher for allowing what the corporations wanted), criminals "... became inextricably bound up with globalization - it was here in the huge reservoirs of the international banking system that the liquid assets of the corporate and criminal worlds mixed and mingled." Glenny's book details his travels to crime scenes of different countries, and he is guided by criminals themselves, smugglers, and a few police officers. It is an eye-opening and disheartening view of the world.
_McMafia_ hops around the world, Glenny gives pictures of a huge, more-or-less well organized crime network routinely allied with governments (efficient and inefficient governments, not just governments that are our friends or our enemies), police, and corporations. The book is often uncomfortable reading, as in the tale of a woman from Moldavia who was sent against her will to be on call at an Israeli brothel, manhandled by Moldavians, Ukrainians, Russians, Egyptians, and Bedouins before the Israelis could get their hands on her. The mafia in Chechnya was so ruthless and feared that it made money allowing criminal rackets in other towns to call themselves "Chechen". If those licensees did not themselves ferociously prosecute local violations of protection, the Chechen mafia would come after the racketeers themselves, so that the brand name did not get devalued. Oligarchs and mobsters from Russia united to make worldwide launderettes for cleaning cash from growing and exporting drugs. Glenny shows how to buy contraband gasoline in Serbia, counterfeit DVDs in China, or illegal caviar in Kazakhstan. He rides with marijuana smugglers from British Columbia, describes being propositioned in sex clubs in Dubai, or tells how pachinko fiends in Tokyo feed their habit. Glenny interviews a member of the famous _yakuza_, Japan's traditional mafia, who says, "Like all organizations we are facing problems encouraging young people to join." Well, it's just a management problem: the _yakuza_ subcontract their mob hits to Chinese gangs.
Sometimes _McMafia_ is scattershot in its jumps all over the globe, but the big picture is perhaps just too complicated for anyone to understand fully. Glenny knows he is writing about scary and dark subjects, but there are a few points of light. There are academics who have done sociological studies on gangs and gang members, some even joining to get data. One of them says, however, "Scholars do not like to waste time with uncooperative sources who refuse to talk, and, alternatively, they do not like to be shot." There is a small organization called Global Witness, which had documented the human suffering in the African diamond trade and has arranged a protocol to assure buyers that diamonds come from sources that meet humane standards. David Soares is the District Attorney in Albany, New York, who has realized that his state is wasting millions to arrest and keep in prison drug offenders from a futile war on drugs, and was elected with a view of changing drug laws. According to Glenny, this sort of change is going to be essential if the disheartening global picture he presents is ever to change. The United Nations reports that 70% of the financing of organized crime comes from the sorts of international drug sales described here. Forced eradication is not going to work, despite the billions that is spent on it; a more prudent and less costly policy would be some legalization of the drug trade and provision of treatment for drug abuse. There are few other recommendations in Glenny's book, other than a sensible call for stricter international regulation of current financial markets to end the untraceable flow of criminal funds. It might be that the world is realizing that the unregulated trade and finance that was supposed to bring us all prosperity is more contributing to the world's misery instead. The reforms can happen, or it can all be left to the gangsters.
Great book on global criminal enterprises July 17, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This is a global journey through organized crime. The first thing I thought of when I read this book was "The World Is Flat" by Thomas Friedman. This book succeeds in every regard where Friedman's book fails. Glenny shows how criminal organizations take advantage of corrupt and inefficient systems to create smooth enterprise. Crime all over the globe is profiled, from Russia to India. Rather than reading like an encyclopedia, Glenny's anecdotes show the insidious nature of global criminals and the large part they play in the world's economy.
Anecdotal Information July 5, 2008 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
Very good read with tons of information but just could not shake the feeling like the book was more a collection of stories told that relied too much on primary sources to recount what they knew than any overarching investigative effort. The stories in their singularity are true, especially those about Eastern Europe, but I am not so sure they fit as part of a bigger puzzle; the author sounds too much like a Friedman on some issues and a union leader on others. The good is that book is definitely eye opening and a must read to get an idea of the criminal world.
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