Are you having trouble viewing this email? If so, click here to see it in a web browser. |
February 11, 2014 Italy's Government Unwittingly Helped Spread the Mafia to Northern CitiesOne reason for the recent pervasive infiltration of southern-Italian crime organizations into the country's northern regions is a government policy that punishes mafiosi by forcing them to resettle far from their home towns, say Paolo Buonanno of the University of Bergamo in Italy and Matteo Pazzona of Universidad Catolica del Norte in Chile. The Italian government assumed that if gangsters were removed from the south and immersed in the more-law-abiding north, they would reform; nearly 3,000 suspected criminals were resettled under the confino plan from 1961–1974. But these individuals acted as seeds in transplanting crime into formerly mafia-free areas, the researchers say. SOURCE: Migrating Mafias |
FEATURED PRODUCTThe First 90 Days App for iPhone and AndroidMAKE YOUR NEXT CAREER TRANSITION A SUCCESS.Download The First 90 Days App today to help you stay ahead of the game. Download on the App StoreDownload on Google Play |
FEATURED PRODUCTFinancial Intelligence Collection: Savvy Advice for Managers Looking to Increase Their Knowledge, Confidence, and Impact (4th Edition)Special CollectionThe Financial Intelligence Collection gives managers mastery of the financial basics they need to plan, budget, forecast, and control resources with confidence. It will enable you to mine every bit of meaning from the financial reports that cross your desk, to employ financial techniques that can multiply your effectiveness, and to foresee business opportunities that remain invisible to others. If you're not a "numbers person," this is the perfect way to learn what you've always needed to know. Buy Now |
Copyright © 2013 Harvard Business School Publishing, an affiliate of Harvard Business School. All rights reserved. Harvard Business Publishing 60 Harvard Way Boston, MA 02163 CUSTOMER SERVICE: 800-545-7685 (US/Canada) 1-617-783-7600 (outside the U.S. and Canada) |
No comments:
Post a Comment