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Books > Social sciences > Sociology, social studies > Crime & criminology > Organized crime
This book explores how the 'new' Asian criminal entrepreneurs in
Canada, known as The Big Circle Boys (BCB), competitively dominated
the Canadian heroin market in the 1990s without a formal
organisation or explicit hierarchical structure. Drawing on the
market resilience framework, it examines how the BCB smuggled drugs
by using social capital, shared resources, and trust effectively
through their ethnicity. How did they counter external security
challenges and promote internal competitive cooperation? Were they
able to resolve disputes peacefully by managing internal relations?
These questions are answered through an analysis of their
networking processes and illustrated in the structural properties
and dynamics of their mono-ethnic criminal network. For the first
time, the BCB players that contributed to the 2001 Canadian and
Australian heroin droughts are revealed through intercepted
telephone calls and court testimonies. It shows how the BCB
collectively switched from heroin to ecstasy since the year 2000.
The operation logistics of drug importation and local trafficking
are scrutinised. This book speaks to those interested in how a
collective of ethnic-Chinese career criminals succeeded and failed
in the international drugs trade, particularly for scholars and
students of social sciences disciplines.
Innocent people are regularly convicted of crimes they did not
commit. A number of systemic factors have been found to contribute
to wrongful convictions, including eyewitness misidentification,
false confessions, informant testimony, official misconduct, and
faulty forensic evidence. In Miscarriages of Justice in Canada,
Kathryn M. Campbell offers an extensive overview of wrongful
convictions, bringing together current sociological,
criminological, and legal research, as well as current case-law
examples. For the first time, information on all known and
suspected cases of wrongful conviction in Canada is included and
interspersed with discussions of how wrongful convictions happen,
how existing remedies to rectify them are inadequate, and how those
who have been victimized by these errors are rarely compensated.
Campbell reveals that the causes of wrongful convictions are, in
fact, avoidable, and that those in the criminal justice system must
exercise greater vigilance and openness to the possibility of error
if the problem of wrongful conviction is to be resolved.
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