Suppr超能文献

有组织犯罪集团:对与招募相关的个体层面风险因素的系统综述。

Organized crime groups: A systematic review of individual-level risk factors related to recruitment.

作者信息

Calderoni Francesco, Comunale Tommaso, Campedelli Gian Maria, Marchesi Martina, Manzi Deborah, Frualdo Niccolò

机构信息

Transcrime Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore Milan Italy.

Security Program Center for the Study of Democracy Sofia Bulgaria.

出版信息

Campbell Syst Rev. 2022 Feb 11;18(1):e1218. doi: 10.1002/cl2.1218. eCollection 2022 Mar.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Studies from multiple contexts conceptualize organized crime as comprising different types of criminal organizations and activities. Notwithstanding growing scientific interest and increasing number of policies aiming at preventing and punishing organized crime, little is known about the specific processes that lead to recruitment into organized crime.

OBJECTIVES

This systematic review aimed at (1) summarizing the empirical evidence from quantitative, mixed methods, and qualitative studies on the individual-level risk factors associated with the recruitment into organized crime, (2) assessing the relative strength of the risk factors from quantitative studies across different factor categories and subcategories and types of organized crime.

METHODS

We searched published and unpublished literature across 12 databases with no constraints as to date or geographic scope. The last search was conducted between September and October 2019. Eligible studies had to be written in English, Spanish, Italian, French, and German.

SELECTION CRITERIA

Studies were eligible for the review if they: Reported on organized criminal groups as defined in this review.Investigated recruitment into organized crime as one of its main objectives.Provided quantitative, qualitative, or mixed methods empirical analyses.Discussed sufficiently well-defined factors leading to recruitment into organized crime.Addressed factors at individual level.For quantitative or mixed-method studies, the study design allowed to capture variability between organized crime members and non-members.

DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS

From 51,564 initial records, 86 documents were retained. Reference searches and experts' contributions added 116 additional documents, totaling 202 studies submitted to full-text screening. Fifty-two quantitative, qualitative, or mixed methods studies met all eligibility criteria. We conducted a risk-of-bias assessment of the quantitative studies while we assessed the quality of mixed methods and qualitative studies through a 5-item checklist adapted from the CASP Qualitative Checklist. We did not exclude studies due to quality issues. Nineteen quantitative studies allowed the extraction of 346 effect sizes, classified into predictors and correlates. The data synthesis relied on multiple random effects meta-analyses with inverse variance weighting. The findings from mixed methods and qualitative studied were used to inform, contextualize, and expand the analysis of quantitative studies.

RESULTS

The amount and the quality of available evidence were weak, and most studies had a high risk-of-bias. Most independent measures were correlates, with possible issues in establishing a causal relation with organized crime membership. We classified the results into categories and subcategories. Despite the small number of predictors, we found relatively strong evidence that being male, prior criminal activity, and prior violence are associated with higher odds of future organized crime recruitment. There was weak evidence, although supported by qualitative studies, prior narrative reviews, and findings from correlates, that prior sanctions, social relations with organized crime involved subjects, and a troubled family environment are associated with greater odds of recruitment.

AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: The available evidence is generally weak, and the main limitations were the number of predictors, the number of studies within each factor category, and the heterogeneity in the definition of organized crime group. The findings identify few risk factors that may be subject to possible preventive interventions.

摘要

背景

来自多个背景的研究将有组织犯罪概念化为包括不同类型的犯罪组织和活动。尽管对预防和惩治有组织犯罪的科学兴趣日益浓厚,相关政策也越来越多,但对于导致人们加入有组织犯罪的具体过程却知之甚少。

目的

本系统综述旨在(1)总结定量研究、混合方法研究和定性研究中关于与加入有组织犯罪相关的个体层面风险因素的实证证据,(2)评估不同因素类别、子类别以及有组织犯罪类型的定量研究中风险因素的相对强度。

方法

我们在12个数据库中搜索了已发表和未发表的文献,对日期和地理范围没有限制。最后一次搜索于2019年9月至10月进行。符合条件的研究必须用英语、西班牙语、意大利语、法语和德语撰写。

入选标准

如果研究符合以下条件,则有资格纳入综述:报告了本综述中定义的有组织犯罪集团。将对加入有组织犯罪的调查作为其主要目标之一。提供了定量、定性或混合方法的实证分析。充分讨论了导致加入有组织犯罪的明确定义因素。涉及个体层面的因素。对于定量或混合方法研究,研究设计允许捕捉有组织犯罪成员和非成员之间的差异。

数据收集与分析

从51564条初始记录中,保留了86份文献。参考文献检索和专家提供又增加了116份文献,总共202项研究进入全文筛选。52项定量、定性或混合方法研究符合所有入选标准。我们对定量研究进行了偏倚风险评估,同时通过改编自CASP定性检查表的5项清单评估混合方法和定性研究的质量。我们没有因质量问题排除研究。19项定量研究允许提取346个效应量,分为预测因素和相关因素。数据综合依赖于具有逆方差加权的多个随机效应荟萃分析。混合方法研究和定性研究的结果用于为定量研究的分析提供信息、背景并进行扩展。

结果

现有证据的数量和质量都很薄弱,大多数研究存在较高的偏倚风险。大多数独立测量是相关因素,在与有组织犯罪成员身份建立因果关系方面可能存在问题。我们将结果分类为类别和子类别。尽管预测因素数量较少,但我们发现相对有力的证据表明,男性、先前的犯罪活动和先前的暴力行为与未来加入有组织犯罪的较高几率相关。虽然有定性研究、先前的叙述性综述以及相关因素的研究结果支持,但关于先前的制裁、与涉及有组织犯罪的主体的社会关系以及不良家庭环境与加入几率增加相关的证据较为薄弱。

作者结论

现有证据总体薄弱,主要局限性在于预测因素的数量、每个因素类别内的研究数量以及有组织犯罪集团定义的异质性。研究结果确定了一些可能适用于预防性干预的风险因素。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/de1f/8833286/b2d00fe2227b/CL2-18-e1218-g008.jpg

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验