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European Journal of Criminology
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Drug Trafficking and Ethnic Minorities in Western Europe

Letizia Paoli

Catholic University of Leuven, Belgium, Letizia.Paoli{at}law.kuleuven.be

Peter Reuter

University of Maryland, USA, preuter{at}umd.edu

Popular media as well as law enforcement agencies throughout Europe routinely identify members of ethnic minorities, and recent migrants in particular, as responsible for selling a large proportion of the illegal drugs that are consumed in Europe. Examination of the existing and modest research literature, as well as a careful reading of the official data, does indeed indicate that certain sectors of the drug market are dominated by a small number of specific immigrant groups. Turkish and Albanian ethnic groups largely control the importation, high-level trafficking and open-air retailing of heroin; Colombian groups dominate the importation of cocaine. However, there are other major sectors of the drug market, notably those for cannabis and synthetic drugs, in which native populations seem to be more important. We offer an explanation for this configuration in terms of the advantages conferred on specific immigrant groups by tighter connections to source and transhipment countries as well as by the lesser ability of police to gain cooperation within those immigrants' communities in the consuming countries.

Key Words: Drug Trafficking • Drugs • Ethnic Minorities • Europe.

European Journal of Criminology, Vol. 5, No. 1, 13-37 (2008)
DOI: 10.1177/1477370807084223


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