TY - BOOK ID - 8361074 TI - Il welfare e il suo doppio : percorsi etnografici nelle camorre del Casertano PY - 2016 SN - 8867054961 8867054260 PB - Ledizioni DB - UniCat KW - Camorra KW - Organized crime KW - Public welfare KW - Criminology, Penology & Juvenile Delinquency KW - Social Welfare & Social Work KW - Social Sciences KW - Benevolent institutions KW - Poor relief KW - Public assistance KW - Public charities KW - Public relief KW - Public welfare reform KW - Relief (Aid) KW - Social welfare KW - Welfare (Public assistance) KW - Welfare reform KW - Human services KW - Social service KW - Crime syndicates KW - Organised crime KW - Crime KW - Corrupt practices KW - Government policy KW - Camorra. KW - Caserta (Italy : Province) KW - Social policy. KW - Caserta, Italy (Province) KW - doppio KW - mafia KW - welfare UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:8361074 AB - Much of the literary production on the Camorra focuses on the aspects of military control of the territory and on predatory activities in politics and economics. Less attention is paid to the social reproductive factors of organized crime groups. The aspects of mutuality and solidarity within the Camorra have never received a systematic and thorough observation. This research instead proposes the analysis of the elements of legitimacy and consensus of the Camorra groups in the territories in which they are established. Welfare and its double is a work that is articulated through a rich system that uses quantitative and ethnographic methodologies: an approach located at the meeting point between sociology and anthropology in the analysis of social policies, which uses unpublished and difficult judicial documents availability. A demanding field work in the Caserta area has made it possible to decipher the forms of social assistance present: public and mafia ones. The result is the panorama of a criminal group that ensures incredible protection against affiliates and their families, which competes with the protections offered by public welfare. However, the results of this study show that it is precisely in the territories most conditioned by the Mafia presence that new forms of social struggle are born. It is here, in fact - where criminal infiltrations affect the procurement of welfare services - that the most innovative social actions in defense of the weakest categories were born. ER -