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gangordered

Gangordered is a term used to describe the degree to which a street gang or organized criminal network exhibits clear internal structure and coordinated activity. It is not a formally defined concept in major criminology textbooks, but it appears in some scholarly articles and field reports as a descriptive label.

Definition and scope: The term refers to organizations that show centralized leadership, defined roles (for example

Origins and usage: The term is informal and varies by author. It is used primarily in ethnographic

Characteristics: Central leadership or a core group; defined duties and hierarchies; formal or semi-formal codes of

Implications and limitations: In criminology and policy discussions, highly gangordered structures can influence the efficiency of

See also: Organized crime; gang segmentation; network analysis; ethnography in criminology.

leaders,
enforcers,
recruiters,
suppliers),
codified
norms,
and
coordinated
operations
such
as
drug
distribution,
finance,
enforcement,
and
information
sharing.
It
is
often
used
to
indicate
the
level
of
organizational
discipline
and
task
specialization
within
a
group.
accounts,
case
studies
of
drug-trafficking
networks,
or
discussions
of
gang
governance.
It
is
sometimes
contrasted
with
looser
or
decentralized
gang
structures.
conduct;
task
specialization;
established
channels
of
communication;
discipline
mechanisms;
and
predictable
routines.
illicit
enterprises,
recruitment,
labor
division,
and
responses
to
law
enforcement.
They
may
affect
levels
of
violence,
territorial
control,
and
conflict
resolution.
The
term
can
risk
overstating
organization
in
some
groups,
and
data
limitations
or
definitional
variability
can
complicate
measurement.