2020
DOI: 10.1007/s12117-020-09398-4
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Under a setting sun: the spatial displacement of the yakuza and their longing for visibility

Abstract: Spaces occupied by organised crime are usually kept secret, hidden, invisible. Japanese criminal syndicates, the yakuza, made instead visibility a key feature of the spaces they occupy through an overt display of their presence in the territory: in the past, a yakuza headquarter could have been instantly recognised by the crest and group name emblazoned on the front wall. However, recent changes in legislation have restrictively regulated these spaces, and the hygienisation of central neighbourhoods that used … Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
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“…There are some indications of the aforementioned. For example, the Italian mafias or the Yakuza syndicates in Japan are powerful criminal organisations that have built complex systems of governance in the underworld (Arlacci, 1986; Skaperdas, 2001; Fallone, 2018; Colleti, 2019; Baradel, 2020; Baradel and Bortolussi, 2021). As much as we might not like the idea that clandestine welfare could develop in high-income or industrialised countries, we might as well find similar structures of parallel welfare governance in those countries.…”
Section: Beyond Latin Americamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There are some indications of the aforementioned. For example, the Italian mafias or the Yakuza syndicates in Japan are powerful criminal organisations that have built complex systems of governance in the underworld (Arlacci, 1986; Skaperdas, 2001; Fallone, 2018; Colleti, 2019; Baradel, 2020; Baradel and Bortolussi, 2021). As much as we might not like the idea that clandestine welfare could develop in high-income or industrialised countries, we might as well find similar structures of parallel welfare governance in those countries.…”
Section: Beyond Latin Americamentioning
confidence: 99%