Member Login Become a Member
Advertisement

The Coming Golden Age of Crime- Dr. Robert Muggah (El Centro Fellow) for Foreign Policy

  |  
02.28.2025 at 08:00pm
The Coming Golden Age of Crime- Dr. Robert Muggah (El Centro Fellow) for Foreign Policy Image

The Coming Golden Age of Crime is by , a principal at the SecDev Group and co-founder of the Igarapé Institute, and , the author of McMafia: Seriously Organised Crime.

Artificial intelligence and other technologies are turbocharging cartels, mafias, and other illicit networks.

Dr. Robert Muggah, Ph.D., one of our El Centro Fellows, had this to say on LinkedIn about his new piece:

Organized crime, one of the world’s oldest professions, is entering a new golden age. In our latest long read with Foreign Policy, we explore the breathtaking sophistication, speed, and scale of today’s criminal networks. Globalization accelerated the spread of organized crime, but digital transformation is taking it to the next level. Given intensifying geopolitical uncertainty and tech acceleration, there are good reasons to believe that organized crime will intensify in the coming years.

My co-author Misha Glenny and I consider the ways organized crime is infiltrating democratic institutions, and how weakening checks and balances are corroding the anti-crime and corruption measures. Case in point – President Trump recently ordered the U.S. Justice Department to halt the enforcement of a U.S. anti-corruption law that bars Americans from bribing foreign officials, ostensibly to promote U.S. competitiveness. He also pardoned Ross Ulbricht, the founder of the Silk Road, a website that trafficked in drugs, laundered money, and hacking-for-hire.

Emerging technologies threaten to further boost organized crime in the coming years. AI-powered hacking operations and untraceable cryptocurrencies are now a staple of money laundering and ransomware schemes. Financial companies and health care providers around the world are growing increasingly concerned about deepfakes enabling identity fraud on an industrial scale, rendering traditional verification systems obsolete. The transition to a digital-first economy is a gift to criminals.

In recent decades, the threat from transnational organized crime has climbed steadily up most countries’ risk rankings, while the rise of hacking and ransomware has brought home to corporations that this issue is not going away anytime soon. Yes, governments are taking steps by means of tougher laws, more financial sanctions, and expanded police operations. Even so, law enforcement agencies engaged in the battle against organized crime are still woefully under-resourced. Most of their efforts are domestically focused, with consistent information sharing and cross-border operations still rare. So long as corruption and underlying conditions are unresolved, law enforcement will fall short.

(The article comes in the wake of our Munich Security Conference event on transnational organized crime held with UNODC and Global Initiative against Transnational Organized Crime, and with partnership with INTERPOL and Europol and credit to Robert Bosch Stiftung and Robert Bosch Academy.)

Click here or click the title of the work listed at the top to read this compelling article. Please note that you must be subscribed to Foreign Policy to gain access to this piece.

About The Author

  • SWJ Staff searches the internet daily for articles and posts that we think are of great interests to our readers.

    View all posts

Article Discussion: