John Dickie has achieved a real undertaking. Retracing the history of the 3 greatest and oldest criminal organizations in Italy: the Camorra (Campania), the Cosa Nostra (Sicily) and the ´Ndrangheta (Calabria). He explains their commonalities and their point of differences and shows how each have learned from one another over time.
Their success has inspired and served as a model for all the modern criminal organizations in the rest of the world, whether in Russian, Asia or Latin America, without even mentioning their direct connection with the mafias in North America.
The research done by the author is impressive, especially on a subject which is so difficult to approach: the criminal world is the "underworld" as the author sometimes calls it. The many trial cases in the past twenty years have served as material to better understand these organizations but not only. The author has done extensive research in all the trials of the past 160 years, national and local newspapers writings about criminal events, movies, theatre plays, etc.
This gives the author the ability to place the reader in Italy's historical, economical, political and legal context. This is what I found the most interesting about the book. Rather than analyzing his subject as an isolated phenomenon, the author puts it in a dynamic perspective, showing that the history of these three criminal organizations is also closely linked to Italy's 160 year-old history: it's birth as a nation, the political regime changes (monarchy, fascism, first and second republics), the industrial revolution, the massive emigrations, especially towards North America, the post-war economic development and being one of the founding members of the European Union, the challenges fighting political terrorism (fascists and red brigades), and finally the (recent) war against the mafias.
I really enjoyed this book. Even if it's pretty dense, I just couldn't put it down.