Dr. Naomi Oosterman has published a study on the regulation of crime and criminality in the art market

Portrait picture of Naomi Oosterman

Dr. Naomi Oosterman (Dept. Arts and Culture Studies), together with Dr. Simon Mackenzie and Dr. Donna Yates, has published a study on the regulation of crime and criminality in the art market. In this study, the authors show how actors within the art market often rely on self-regulation and so-called symbolic security bubbles to manage risk. 

The study of crime and criminality in the art market has received increasing attention within criminology, however little has been written on the criminogenic values built into the structure of the art market. Despite increasing legislation to counteract instances of money laundering and fraud, the legal governance of the art market brings such ambiguity that actors in the market have formed their own responses to managing risk. In this article, we discuss how these actors rely on security bubbles and self-regulation and how this can have the unfortunate effect of adding to a criminogenic art market where white-collar crime is sustained. The dependence on self-policing created a field where powerful elites run things, and traditional policing agents have little purchase.

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The article is published, open access, in the Journal for White Collar and Corporate Crime and is accessible here: https://doi.org/10.1177/2631309X211035724

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