NCJ Number
82793
Journal
Crime and Delinquency Volume: 28 Issue: 2 Dated: (April 1982) Pages: 247-270
Date Published
1982
Length
24 pages
Annotation
The article concerns arson and citizens' activism in Boston.
Abstract
The dimensions of the arson problem in the United States and the failure of law enforcement by government agencies are discussed, as part of an analysis of arson as an organized crime enterprise. Like other forms of racketeering; arson for profit typically involves recognizably 'criminal' entrepreneurs and their underlings, as well as a network of corrupt officials in police and fire departments and insurance companies. The greatest profits, however, are made by banks and 'legitimate' real estate investors whose lending and development practices create the incentive for arson and yield the greatest benefits from land use conversion in the cities. Various forms of action by citizens have followed both the arson wave and the recent cutbacks in fire protection in major cities. The fragmented and contradictory nature of the sometimes explosive reaction points to the power of the political machine in Boston, as well as to larger race and class conflicts rooted in the capitalist urban economy. (Author abstract)