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Assessing the success factors of organized crime groups: Intelligence challenges for strategic thinking

Jerry H. Ratcliffe (Department of Criminal Justice, Temple University, Philadelphia, USA)
Steven J. Strang (Centre for Criminal Intelligence Research and Innovation, Royal Canadian Mounted Police, Ottawa, Canada)
Ralph B. Taylor (Department of Criminal Justice, Temple University, Philadelphia, USA)

Policing: An International Journal

ISSN: 1363-951X

Article publication date: 11 March 2014

2386

Abstract

Purpose

Expert assessment of organized crime (OC) group capabilities is often the basis for national threat assessments; it is rare, however, for variations in collective expert opinions of OC success factors to be systematically evaluated. The purpose of this paper is to examine the differences in how 150 criminal intelligence experts from a variety of national and organizational backgrounds sort and organize perceived attributes for OC group success.

Design/methodology/approach

The paper uses the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) Sleipnir framework as a foundation for a Q-sort survey regarding the characteristics of OC group success. The survey was delivered to over 150 criminal intelligence specialists at a national conference in 2011. Descriptive statistics, seemingly unrelated regression, and biplots reveal different aspects of survey responses.

Findings

Results show that perceptions of the ingredients for OC group success both vary by nationality and by analysts’ level within the hierarchy of the law enforcement structure (local, state, national). These differences are marked; particular characteristics are viewed as differentially important for the perceived success of OC groups. Furthermore, the results suggest that there are shared and structured differences in perceptions of OC group success characteristics.

Research limitations/implications

The survey has identified distinct differences between the characteristics for OC group's success perceived by analysts in the USA, Canada, and beyond. Furthermore, the organizational level of the analyst (local, state, national) shapes the perceptions of success factors. It is possible variations identified merely reflect differentials in training and experience, i.e. different organizational perceptions of the same problem. That aside, the patterning of results seem likely to be based to some degree on external factors linked to OC group operations, and not just on individual characteristics of the surveyed intelligence professionals.

Practical implications

The current research raises a number of questions regarding the confidence that should be placed in OC group assessments. The research has highlighted areas of professional dissonance that were not apparent from the RCMP Sleipnir research alone. Causes of the dissonance in assessments, and connections of these variations to both intelligence analysts’ experience, training, and organizational ethos; and to OC group capabilities, seem deserving of additional attention.

Originality/value

Expert intelligence analyst interpretation of OC group capability is central to most national risk and threat assessments, yet the assessment processes themselves are rarely examined. This is a unique survey of over 150 intelligence personnel that highlights significant differences in perceptions of OC groups, differences that raise questions about how the authors evaluate the OC threat.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank the organizers and participants of the 2011 IALEIA/LEIU annual training conference for their participation and support of this research, David Bartlett (RCMP) for clarification of the Sleipnir development methodology, and Carlena Orosco for coding assistance.

Citation

H. Ratcliffe, J., J. Strang, S. and B. Taylor, R. (2014), "Assessing the success factors of organized crime groups: Intelligence challenges for strategic thinking", Policing: An International Journal, Vol. 37 No. 1, pp. 206-227. https://doi.org/10.1108/PIJPSM-03-2012-0095

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2014, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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