2021-10-05 10:18
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Criminal actors that are embedded in state institutions are now the most dominant form of organized crime worldwide, according to the 2021 Global Organized Crime Index. Image: Screenshot
The Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime last week released its first worldwide assessment, the 2021 Global Organized Crime Index, a 188-page report which finds a disturbing rise in organized crime across a number of fronts worldwide.
“It is a sobering thought, for instance, that nearly 80% of the world’s population today live in countries with high levels of criminality,” the report notes. “It is equally alarming to consider that the exploitation of people, in the form of human trafficking, has become the most pervasive criminal economy in the world — a development that serves as a dark reminder of the dehumanizing impact of organized crime.”
Along with the report, the Global Initiative released an online tool that lets users compare global “heat maps” of various forms of organized crime, as well as different countries’ resilience to corruption. In the wake of the theocratic takeover of Afghanistan by the Taliban, concern about the ongoing plague of state-embedded criminality and “mafia states” has gained new urgency.
“State-embedded actors are the most dominant criminal actor type in the world,” the report concludes. “The degree to which criminality permeates state institutions varies, from low-level corruption to full state capture, but, across the spectrum, this involvement has implications for countries’ capacity to respond to organized crime.”