University Press of America
Pages: 298
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-0-7618-6061-7 • Hardback • June 2013 • $86.00 • (£66.00)
978-0-7618-6505-6 • Paperback • February 2015 • $48.99 • (£38.00)
For almost fifty years, Mark H. Haller had been a historian of illegal enterprise—more commonly known as organized crime—in urban America. He is the author of an introduction to the now classic work by John Landesco in Organized Crime in Chicago (University of Chicago Press, 1968). Haller passed away in 2012.
Matthew G. Yeager obtained his bachelor’s degree in criminology from the University of California at Berkeley in 1972. He was introduced to the work of Mark H. Haller and John Landesco during this time. His master’s degree is from the State University of New York at Albany (1975), and his doctorate in sociology is from Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada (2006). He has published over thirty articles and studies in theoretical and applied criminology and is a practicing clinical criminologist in sentencing alternatives. He is currently associate professor in the Department of Sociology at King’s University College, part of Western University-Canada. He lives in London, Ontario.
Part I: Chicago
Chapter 1: Illinois Association for Criminal Justice
Chapter 2: John Landesco and the Illinois Crime Survey (1929)
Chapter 3: Organized Crime in Urban Society: Chicago in the Twentieth Century (1971)
Chapter 4: Biographical Sketches: Al Capone, Jack Guzik, Arnold Rothstein, Meyer Lansky and Max Hoff; Definition of Organized Crime
Part II : Philadelphia
Chapter 5: Philadelphia Bootlegging and the Report of the Special August Grand Jury (1985)
Chapter 6: The Bruno Family of Philadelphia: Organized Crime as a Regulatory Agency (1994)
Chapter 7: Loansharking in Philadelphia: Social Control in an Illegal Enterprise (1992)
Part III - Illegal Enterprise Theory
Chapter 8: The Changing Structure of American Gambling in the Twentieth Century (1979)
Chapter 9: Loansharking in American Cities: Historical Analysis of a Marginal Enterprise (1977)
Chapter 10: Bootleggers as Businessmen: From City Slums to City Builders (1985)
Chapter 11: Illegal Enterprise: A Theoretical and Historical Interpretation (1990)
Subject Index
This book is well suited for undergraduate classes within criminology or criminal justice programs that focus on policy. The language in the book is written in a manner that citizens outside of criminology will benefit as well. . . .For those in the criminology field, most well-trained criminologists will be familiar with several of the examples of well-documented programs and studies provided in the book, such as problem-oriented policing and drug treatment courts. . . .Mathew Yeager has given us a worthy compendium of Haller's major work and contributions on the subject of how organized crime is actually organized, including some of Haller's publications which are now difficult to find.
— Criminal Law and Criminal Justice Books
It is organized to showcase three of Haller’s unique contributions to the field: rediscovery and highlighting of the circumstances and content of John Landesco’s 1929 study of organized crime in Chicago; a description and commentary on the activities of the Angelo Bruno family in Philadelphia; and an analysis...of Illegal Enterprise accompanied by studies of three particular businesses, gambling, loan sharking and bootlegging. They are tied together through Haller’s self-perception "as a social scientist, using the tools of a trained historian".... [I]f I were designing an introductory course in Organized Crime, Illegal Enterprisewould be one of the books on my recommended reading list.
— Trends In Organized Crime
This monograph brings together the major works and unpublished papers of Mark Haller, whose scholarship spans more than forty years. . . . His pioneering work on organized crime in the United States influenced the move away from organized crime as a bureaucracy of evil to a modern view that recognizes the phenomenon as an enterprise of interconnected partnerships devoid of an overarching leadership. . . . This book is a valuable addition to the literature on organized crime, providing a one-volume source for the essential work of Mark Haller.
— Howard Abadinsky, St. John’s University, New York