RT Article T1 Intergenerational transmission and organised crime: a study of seven families in the south of the Netherlands JF Trends in organized crime VO 23 IS 3 SP 227 OP 241 A1 Spapens, A. C. 1964- A2 Moors, Hans 1966- LA English UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1820255913 AB Kinship ties play an important role in organised crime, but little attention has been paid as yet to criminal families and intergenerational transmission of delinquent behaviour as well as criminal ‘leadership.’ This paper presents the results of an in-depth study of seven families in the south of the Netherlands that produced a leader of a criminal group in at least one generation. In almost every generation, most male and female members of these families have criminal records, but intergenerational transmission of criminal leadership has so far occurred in only two families. There is a range of risk factors that promote criminal behaviour across generations, but an important explanation is that family members select their partners and friends from their own closed and deviant subcultures, and seem to favour those who have already developed criminal track records. Apart from risk factors at the individual, family and social environment levels, criminal behaviour was also stimulated by the seven families quickly taking advantage of emerging crime markets, particularly ecstasy production and indoor cannabis cultivation from the 1990s onwards. NO Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 240-241 K1 Intergenerational Transmission K1 North-Brabant K1 Family K1 Organized Crime K1 Parenting K1 Social Learning DO 10.1007/s12117-019-09363-w