Mafia Politics. Marco Santoro

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understood and denounced). The success of a bestseller is not only in the number of copies sold or its position in bestseller lists, but also in its capacity to shape the public debate according to its own terms and in its even wider circulation through other means, such as films and TV series (and both have been made from Gomorrah the book).

      The story of mafia research in Italy and the US accounts for the greatest part of mafia studies as we know them today. But something still remains to be covered – which may, indeed, account for a seventh G effect. We have seen how the historian Hobsbawm approached the mafia and similar phenomena such as social banditry in a comparative framework. This is not that common in mafia studies, where national cases – sometimes even regional ones – have been typically studied as individual and sometimes even exceptional cases, the product of a very local and contingent array of events and factors. Only rarely have the Sicilian mafia or the Neapolitan camorra been approached as instances of a more general class of social phenomena. In the case of mafia studies in the US, this parochialism has been so strong as to render Italian research on Italian mafias irrelevant or unknown to scholars – who very often do not read Italian. The same has been true for Italian scholars or even foreign students of Italian mafias, who have rarely compared their research objects to what was known about their American counterparts.

      For many years, studies on organized criminal forms have typically been regionalized, i.e. remained local. There were studies on triads in the nineteenth century as well as on Indian thugs, many undertaken by British (colonial) observers. There were local studies (not many, as far as we know) on Japanese yakuza, the subject of a well-established genre of film production in Japan since at least the 1950s. More recently, there have been studies on gangs in Mexico and Colombia – many only available in Spanish. None of these books has been able to overcome the borders of their original language and enter the international debate, i.e. the debate written or spoken in English. When this has occurred, it has happened because of certain institutional arrangements or innovations in scholarly toolboxes. The ‘organized crime’ category has helped, of course, in looking for patterns across cases – regional and even national. After all, ethnicity has been a central variable in this research area for a long time. But you can study Mexican gangs without thinking you are contributing to the study of Sicilian mafia, a few similarities, for instance in terms of the concept of honour and masculine culture (after all, both Mexico and Sicily were influenced by Spanish baroque culture), notwithstanding.

      In the 1980s, and even more in the 1990s, however, something changed in literature on mafia. The implicit message found in Hobsbawm’s first book was to become reality. Hess had already suggested a move towards comparative research in his introduction to a new Italian edition of Alongi’s (1977 [1887]) classic text on mafia. Gambetta’s book raised issues of comparative analysis, and a few of Gambetta’s students applied his model to other instances of the ‘industry of private protection’, such as the Russian mafiya (Varese 1994, 2001), Japanese yakuza (Hill 2003) and Hong Kong triads (Chu 2000). Other scholars also started to analyse local criminal experiences as if they were instances of a wider class of mafia phenomena, subsumed under some more general conceptual categories, e.g., as ‘patrimonial alliances’ in Collins’s (2011) interpretation.

      The globalization of organized crime has surely pressed observers to focus on this network of interconnections as well as on their similarities. Nor is it surprising that books by journalists have been among the first to have arrived in bookshops and libraries – with the pioneering contribution of Manuel Castells (2000), who was neither a mafia specialist nor an established name in mafia studies but, rather, a sensitive and reputed analyst of social change. Comparative studies on mafias are far from common; we can count them on the fingers of one hand (see Varese 2010, 2017).

      A big issue lies at the centre of this literature, however: how can we be sure we are making sound comparisons among things so far apart in space and with such different histories as the Sicilian mafia, the yakuza, the triads and even the so-called Russian mafiya if they are not supported by a theory, or at least a general concept (e.g., ‘organized crime’, the ‘industry of private protection’, and so on)? Indeed, a general concept of some kind is necessary when we are writing or talking about mafias in the plural – even if we restrict our range to Italian mafias such as the Sicilian one, the camorra, and the ’ndrangheta, which are different enough among themselves to make it difficult to compare them without some conceptual structure (see, e.g., Paoli 2003). This set of concepts is exactly what we need when constructing our research object.

      To conclude this chapter, it would probably be useful to offer a final diagrammatic representation about the main distinctions that have structured the discussion on mafia since its inception in Italy in the nineteenth century. Instead of an image, I synthetize them according to the following set of conceptual, even epistemological, alternatives: individual/collective; centralized/decentred; ethnically based/diffused; economic/political; culture/structure; culture as regulative/culture as constitutive. Think of them as a series of nested, recursive oppositions. We will see in the next chapter how this set of oppositions has been managed in what looks like the single most influential of contemporary theories of mafia – i.e. the economic theory set forth by Gambetta working on the shoulders of pioneers such as Schelling, Reuter, Tilly and economic historian of Venice in the Middle Ages and early modern times, Frederic C. Lane. The next chapter addresses a critical reconstruction of that theory.

      1  1 In this foreword, Cressey set forth a distinction between ‘organized’ and ‘an organization’, insisting that, in Sicily, according to Hess, mafia was organized but had not developed into an organization, as it had in the US. Cressey (1972b) advanced the same distinction in a critical review of Albini (1971).

      2  2 Jeremy Boissevain ‘established his name in anthropology as one of the “Bs” – Boissevain, Barth, Bailey, Barnes, Bott – who in the 1960s and 1970s were important in superseding the structural-functionalist paradigm in British social anthropology with an actionist approach. Focusing on choice rather than constraint, on individual agency rather than structure, on manipulation and power-play rather than rules and tradition, and on dyadic relationships and ephemeral groupings rather than corporate groups, these transactionalists were instrumental in bringing the individual back into the scope of social anthropology’ (Ginkel and Stengs 2006, 15).

      3  3 Like other villages studied by anthropologists, those studied by mafia scholars are also known by pseudonyms. ‘Villamaura’ was, indeed, the rural town of Sambuca, in the Province of Agrigento, just a few miles from Contessa Entellina, the village studied by Blok under the name of ‘Genuardo’. For the authors’ retrospective assessment of their study after thirty years, see Schneider and Schneider (2011).

      4  4 For a very critical review of Sabetti (1984), see Blok (1986, 168): ‘We do not hear much about people who disagreed with the illegal regime of

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