Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime
The Global Organized Crime Index is the first tool of its kind designed to assess
levels of organized crime and resilience to organized criminal activity. It includes in
its rankings all the UN member states – 193 countries.
The results, which draw from a comprehensive dataset informed by experts
worldwide, paint a worrying picture of the reach, scale, and impact of organized
crime. It is a sobering thought, for instance, that nearly 80% of the world’s
population today live in countries with high levels of criminality. It is equally
alarming to consider that the exploitation of people, in the form of human
trafficking, has become the most pervasive criminal economy in the world – a
development that serves as a dark reminder of the dehumanizing impact of
organized crime. Meanwhile, the Index highlights how state involvement in criminality is a deeply embedded phenomenon around the world: state officials and
clientelist networks who hold influence over state authorities are now the most
dominant brokers of organized crime, and not cartel leaders or mafia bosses, as
one might be forgiven for thinking. And these are but a few stand-out examples
of the findings of this Index.
This report introduces the Global Organized Crime Index and sets out
the results and implications of the 2020 data, the year in which a new
pandemic began to ravage the world. Of course, organized crime is not a new
phenomenon, but it is now a more urgent issue than ever. Criminal networks
and their impact have spread across the globe in the last two decades, driven
by geopolitical, economic, and technological forces. The analysis in this report
conclusively demonstrates that organized crime is the most pernicious threat
to human security, development, and justice in the world today.
As a unique data-driven analytical tool, the Index provides the most comprehensive assessment to date of the pervasiveness of criminal markets, the
dynamics of criminal actors, and of countries’ effectiveness in establishing the
defence mechanisms and responses needed to ensure operational resilience to
organized crime. The Index metrics are based on three constituent parts: the
scope, scale, and impact of specific criminal markets; the structure and influence
of criminal actors; and the extent and effectiveness of countries’ resilience
measures – the antibodies that protect against the threat of organized crime.
These three domains are used to assign each country a criminality score and a
resilience score using a scale of 1 to 10. The rich data, however, allows users to
do more than just compare rankings, but to examine more closely the indicators
affecting a country’s criminality and resilience. It illustrates patterns and trends
in criminality and resilience that prompt deeper investigation and analysis. The
Index, therefore, allows for a nuanced assessment of countries’ criminality, juxtaposed against their institutional and non-state reservoirs of resilience.
This is the first iteration of the Global Index. It will be updated every two years,
providing longitudinal measurement and analysis to track criminality and
resilience over time. It aims therefore to provide a global baseline assessment,
with the intention that it will become a consistent and comprehensive resource
that contextualizes and interprets evolving organized crime dynamics. The
results of the Index point to a number of implications that will contribute to
better policymaking and building effective, systematic responses to organized
crime at national, regional, and international levels. In brief, these necessary
alternatives include the following:
The scale of the problem must be acknowledged before it can be
addressed effectively.
Organized crime is a truly transnational phenomenon.
Ending the impunity of state-embedded actors will enhance global
resilience to criminality.
Continuing to bolster democracy, especially in fragile states, is a
viable and useful response.
Working towards peace is crucial in reducing the opportunities for
criminality to thrive.