How Organised Crime Systems Adapt: Opportunity, Resilience, and Laundering Connectivity in Transnational Criminal Networks

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Abstract

This study develops and empirically tests a general framework explaining how organised crime systems adapt and persist under regulatory and enforcement pressure. Drawing on a mixed-methods design combining expert interviews, documentary analysis, and structural equation modelling, the article advances the Opportunity–Resilience–Persistence (ORP) framework, extended through the concept of laundering connectivity to capture hybrid financial infrastructures linking illicit and licit domains. Empirically, the model is examined using evidence from scam-compound economies in Southeast Asia, a setting in which adaptive criminal organisation is especially visible. The findings show that organised crime systems do not merely evade controls but actively construct opportunity structures and deliberately engineer resilience through redundancy and hybridisation. Laundering connectivity functions as an infrastructural amplifier that converts these adaptive capacities into durable persistence. By conceptualising laundering as an adaptive social system embedded in transnational inequality and regulatory asymmetry, the study contributes a structural, anticipatory explanation of criminal persistence with implications for organised crime theory, governance, and harm-oriented intervention.

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