'The paradox of expected punishment: Legal and economic
factors determining
success and failure in the fight against organized crime'
Edgardo Buscaglia has authored this study based on 14 years of research
spanning 107 nations that ratified the Palermo Convention. The study looks at asset
forfeiture and effective results legal enforcement. (Buscaglia is a professor at ITAM
School of Law in Mexico and Columbia University, New York)
'The study is appears in Review of Law and Economics 4(1), Article 14,
October 2008.
In his conclusion Buscaglia states,
... in the absence
of an active financial intelligence-based criminal asset forfeiture program,
high-level corruption grows rapidly while, paradoxically, public sectors
continue to devote more criminal justice system resources to
incarcerating/convicting increasing numbers of organized crime members. At the
same time, empirical analysis shows that higher probabilities of sanctions aimed
at physical persons combined with stiffer sentencing guidelines in the books
against organized crime members do not play their dissuasive role in the absence
of preventive programs to reduce the flow of youth to criminal groups. This
constitutes the paradox of criminal sanctions where more frequent and stiffer
punishments applied to physical persons lead to higher levels of organized crime
and higher level corruption.
Evidence-based results show that the inter-institutional coordination and the
field specialization of judicial and intelligence systems are a necessary
condition for successfully addressing organized crime. Moreover, the
effectiveness of combining deterrence and preventive measures to counteract
organized crime, as shown above, are both necessary to expect reductions in
organized crime
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