RT Article T1 Understanding the new geographies of organised crime: Empirical studies into the spatialities of organised criminal phenomena JF Criminology & criminal justice VO 25 IS 1 SP 3 OP 20 A1 Cockbain, Ella A2 Estévez-Soto, Patricio A2 Allum, Felia 1971- LA English YR 2025 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1916734715 AB Organised crime – and the people, processes and structures involved – do not exist in a geographical vacuum. They have an inherent spatiality: shaped by and shaping the places they occupy in physical, virtual and hybrid spaces. Although the ‘social embeddedness’ of organised crime is relatively well-recognised, its spatiality – or ‘spatial embeddedness’ – has been neglected. This article contextualises and introduces our special issue on the new geographies of organised crime. We put forward a central argument that geographical lenses can advance and enrich understanding of organised crime, briefly review relevant literature and explain some of the foundational concepts in geographical thinking. We discuss the rationale for this special issue and highlight its papers’ main contributions. Since the geographies of the illicit are full of complexities, heterogeneities and subjectivities, we do not propose any singular approach, but rather see a plurality of possibilities for better incorporating geography into organised crime scholarship. Accordingly, the papers are theoretically and methodologically diverse, as well as covering varied topics and locations. K1 Territory K1 Space K1 Scale K1 Place K1 mafia K1 illicit economies K1 Global South K1 Global North K1 Geospatial DO 10.1177/17488958241302974