The Mob's Daily Number: Organized Crime and the Numbers Gambling Industry
The Mob's Daily Number provides an in-depth historical and sociological examination of the numbers gambling industry that continues to generate significant income for organized criminals. In addition this study uses the findings to assess the utility of the major theoretical perspectives in the study of organized crime. The author begins with a description of the basic structure and functioning of the numbers game and a social and political history of illegal lotteries from the time of the colonial American/British government to the present numbers game still prospering in many urban communities. He then discusses and analyzes illegal markets and illegal firms before moving into the impact that organized crime generally and numbers gambling specifically have on community "social processes," coupled with a description of the social characteristics of numbers personnel, and the significance of those issues in understanding illegal enterprises. The author concludes with a thorough description of the of the major organized crime theories and the application of the presents findings to those broad theoretical paradigms encompassing the greater theoretical concerns in the realm of organized crime.
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The Mob's Daily Number: Organized Crime and the Numbers Gambling Industry
The Mob's Daily Number provides an in-depth historical and sociological examination of the numbers gambling industry that continues to generate significant income for organized criminals. In addition this study uses the findings to assess the utility of the major theoretical perspectives in the study of organized crime. The author begins with a description of the basic structure and functioning of the numbers game and a social and political history of illegal lotteries from the time of the colonial American/British government to the present numbers game still prospering in many urban communities. He then discusses and analyzes illegal markets and illegal firms before moving into the impact that organized crime generally and numbers gambling specifically have on community "social processes," coupled with a description of the social characteristics of numbers personnel, and the significance of those issues in understanding illegal enterprises. The author concludes with a thorough description of the of the major organized crime theories and the application of the presents findings to those broad theoretical paradigms encompassing the greater theoretical concerns in the realm of organized crime.
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The Mob's Daily Number: Organized Crime and the Numbers Gambling Industry

The Mob's Daily Number: Organized Crime and the Numbers Gambling Industry

by Don Liddick
The Mob's Daily Number: Organized Crime and the Numbers Gambling Industry

The Mob's Daily Number: Organized Crime and the Numbers Gambling Industry

by Don Liddick

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Overview

The Mob's Daily Number provides an in-depth historical and sociological examination of the numbers gambling industry that continues to generate significant income for organized criminals. In addition this study uses the findings to assess the utility of the major theoretical perspectives in the study of organized crime. The author begins with a description of the basic structure and functioning of the numbers game and a social and political history of illegal lotteries from the time of the colonial American/British government to the present numbers game still prospering in many urban communities. He then discusses and analyzes illegal markets and illegal firms before moving into the impact that organized crime generally and numbers gambling specifically have on community "social processes," coupled with a description of the social characteristics of numbers personnel, and the significance of those issues in understanding illegal enterprises. The author concludes with a thorough description of the of the major organized crime theories and the application of the presents findings to those broad theoretical paradigms encompassing the greater theoretical concerns in the realm of organized crime.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780761812661
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 02/18/1999
Pages: 208
Product dimensions: 6.16(w) x 9.32(h) x 0.68(d)

About the Author

Don Liddick is Assistant Professor of Administration of Justice at the University of Pittsburgh at Greensburg.

Table of Contents

chapter 1 Introduction
chapter 2 Early Lotteries and the Development of Numbers
chapter 3 Numbers Gambling: 1960 to the Present
chapter 4 Numbers: The Structure of Markets and Enterprises
chapter 5 The Impact of Numbers Gambling on Communities
chapter 6 The Social Characteristics of Numbers Workers
chapter 7 Numbers Gambling and Organized Crime Theory
chapter 8 A Brief Narrative Describing Numbers Operations in New York City: 1960-1969
chapter 9 Index
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