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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This is a 5 page paper that looks at the link between organized crime and social institutions. An argument is made for social disorganization being a leading cause of crime. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: KW60_KForgcrm.rtf
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listed below. Citation styles constantly change, and these examples may not contain the most recent updates. The Social Institution of Organized Crime , 9/2010 VISIT
/aftersale.htm--properly! When one thinks of social institutions, one generally has a positive view of the term. Social institutions, one tends to feel,
are helpful things like libraries, fire departments, families, churches, useful traditions, and so on. However, this is a rather one-sided view of the matter. In truth, social institutions are neither
inherently helpful nor harmful to the structure of the community, but rather can take either form. One key example of this in action is organized crime; while few would think
of gangs and organized crime as examples of social institution, the fact remains that such groups meet most all theoretical criteria for being labeled as such. This paper will seek
to examine the empirical and speculative theories surrounding the development of social institutions, with a view to how organized crime is enabled and sanctioned by failings on the part of
community infrastructure. In this paragraph, the student is shown to examine the definition of social institutions. In order to look at this issue effectively, one must first make the
determination of exactly what a social institution is. While of course definitions tend to vary from one writer to the next, a definition based on common consensus might fairly be
that a social institution is a collection of individuals within a community who are organized in service of some specific goal (Carley, 2002). In this light, the view of social
institution is already broadened somewhat. A group of people established to oversee local amateur baseball matches might well be called a social institution. So could ones family, ones church, or,
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