Abstract
Nowadays, organized crime networks share intelligence and knowledge as a fundamental asset for their members, thus making criminal organizations more global in nature and activities. Internet has consequently become the natural environment for these organizations. This evolution has put a bigger pressure in Law Enforcement Agencies (LEAs) demanding more efforts and resources in the fight against transnational organized crime. LEAs can therefore profit from international cooperation in fighting these organizations. However, differences among legal frameworks, languages and police and judicial culture may create interoperability issues. The CAPER project addressed the prevention of transnational organized crime by trying to provide the needed interoperability among the different European LEAs. In this work, we introduce a supranational Organized Crime Structure (OCS) modelled through an ontology in order to improve European LEAs Interoperability (ELIO). Results suggest that ELIO is able to provide the required interoperability features, overcoming the issues that arise in this scenario.
Access provided by Autonomous University of Puebla. Download to read the full chapter text
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
Keywords
References
Goodman, M.: What Business Can Learn From Organized Crime. Harvard Business Review (November 2011), http://hbr.org/2011/11/what-business-can-learn-from-organized-crime/
Carr, J.: New approaches to dealing with online child pornography. In: Second Worldwide Cybersecurity Summit (WCS), pp. 1–3 (June 2011)
Cunningham, S., Kendall, T.: Prostitution 2.0: The changing face of sex work. Journal of Urban Economics 69, 273–287 (2011)
Kaza, S., Xu, J., Marshall, B., Chen, H.: Topological Analysis of Criminal Activity Networks in Multiple Jurisdictions. In: Proceedings of the 2005 National Conference on Digital Government Research. dg.o 2005, pp. 251–252. Digital Government Society of North America (2005)
Europol: Europol Review 2012. General Report on Europol activities (August 2013)
Hagan, F.E.: The Organized Crime Continuum: A Further Specification of a New Conceptual Model. Criminal Justice Review 8(2), 52–57 (1983)
Hagan, F.E.: “Organized crime” and “organized crime”: Indeterminate problems of definition. Trends in Organized Crime 9(4), 127–137 (2006)
Bundeskriminalamt: National Situation Report (2011), http://www.bka.de
Interpol: Annual report (2012), http://www.interpol.int/News-and-media/Publications#n627
Benyon, J.: Law and order review, 1993 an audit of crime, policing and criminal justice issues. Centre for the Study of Public Order, University of Leicester, Leicester, England (1994)
Finckenauer, J.O.: Problems of definition: What is organized crime? Trends in Organized Crime 8(3), 63–83 (2005)
Albanese, J.S.: North American Organised Crime. Global Crime 6(1), 8–18 (2004)
Patil, L., Dutta, D., Sriram, R.: Ontology-Based Exchange of Product Data Semantics. IEEE Transactions on Automation Science and Engineering 2(3), 213–225 (2005)
Wong, A.K.Y., Ray, P., Parameswaran, N., Strassner, J.: Ontology Mapping for the Interoperability Problem in Network Management. IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications 23(10), 2058–2068 (2005)
Berges, I., Bermudez, J., Illarramendi, A.: Toward Semantic Interoperability of Electronic Health Records. IEEE Transactions on Information Technology in Biomedicine 16(3), 424–431 (2012)
Laleci, G.B., Yuksel, M., Dogac, A.: Providing Semantic Interoperability between Clinical Care and Clinical Research Domains. IEEE Journal of Biomedical and Health Informatics 17(2), 356–369 (2013)
Breuker, J., Casanovas, P., Klein, M.C., Francesconi, E.: Law, Ontologies and the Semantic Web. IOS Press (2009)
Casellas, N.: Legal Ontologies. In: Legal Ontology Engineering: Methodologies, Modelling Trends, and the Ontology of Professional Judicial Knowledge. Law, Governance and Technology Series, vol. 3, pp. 109–170. Springer (2011)
Gómez-Pérez, A., Fernández-López, M., Corcho, O.: Ontological Engineering. With Examples from the Areas of Knowledge Management, e-Commerce and the Semantic Web. Advanced Information and Knowledge Processing. Springer (2004)
Sure, Y., Studer, R.: A Methodology for Ontology-Based Knowledge Management. In: Towards the Semantic Web: Ontology-driven Knowledge Management, pp. 33–46. John Wiley and Sons (2003)
Kotis, K., Vouros, A.: Human-centered ontology engineering: the HCOME methodology. Knowledge and Information Systems 10(1), 109–131 (2006)
De Nicola, A., Missikoff, M., Navigli, R.: A proposal for a unified process for ontology building: UPON. In: Andersen, K.V., Debenham, J., Wagner, R. (eds.) DEXA 2005. LNCS, vol. 3588, pp. 655–664. Springer, Heidelberg (2005)
Casellas, N.: Methodologies, Tools and Languages for Ontology Design. In: Legal Ontology Engineering: Methodologies, Modelling Trends, and the Ontology of Professional Judicial Knowledge. Law, Governance and Technology Series, vol. 3, pp. 57–108. Springer (2011)
Guarino, N.: Formal ontology in information systems, pp. 3–15. IOS Press, Amsterdam (1998)
Sirin, E., Parsiaa, B., Graua, B., Kalyanpura, A., Katza, Y.: Pellet: A practical owl-dl reasoner. Journal of Web Semantics: Science, Services and Agents on the World Wide Web 5(2), 51–53 (2007)
W3C: OWL 2 Web Ontology Language Structural Specification and Functional-Style Syntax (December 2012)
Casanovas, P., Casellas, N., Vallbé, J.J.: Empirically Grounded Developments of Legal Ontologies: A Socio-Legal Perspective. In: Approaches to Legal Ontologies: Theories, Domains and Methodologies, pp. 49–68. Springer (2011)
Hua, J.: Study on Knowledge Acquisition Techniques. In: Second International Symposium on Intelligent Information Technology Application, pp. 181–185. IEEE (2008)
Lambe, P.: Organising knowledge: taxonomies, knowledge and organizational effectiveness. Oxford and Chandos Publishing (2007)
Hepp, M.: Possible Ontologies. How Reality Constrains the Development of Relevant Ontologies. IEEE Internet Computing 11(1), 90–96 (2007)
Gruber, T.R.: A translation approach to portable ontology specifications. Knowledge Acquisition 5(2), 199–220 (1993)
Guarino, N., Welty, C.A.: An Overview of OntoClean. In: Handbook on Ontologies. Springer (2009)
Mostowfi, F., Fotouhi, F.: Improving Quality of Ontology: An Ontology Transformation Approach. In: Proceedings 22nd International Conference on Data Engineering Workshops, p. 61 (2006)
Tartir, S., Arpinar, I.B., Sheth, A.P.: Ontological Evaluation and Validation. In: Theory and Applications of Ontology: Computer Applications, pp. 115–130. Springer (2010)
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2014 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
About this paper
Cite this paper
González-Conejero, J., Varela Figueroa, R., Muñoz-Gomez, J., Teodoro, E. (2014). Organized Crime Structure Modelling for European Law Enforcement Agencies Interoperability through Ontologies. In: Casanovas, P., Pagallo, U., Palmirani, M., Sartor, G. (eds) AI Approaches to the Complexity of Legal Systems. AICOL 2013. Lecture Notes in Computer Science(), vol 8929. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-45960-7_16
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-45960-7_16
Publisher Name: Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg
Print ISBN: 978-3-662-45959-1
Online ISBN: 978-3-662-45960-7
eBook Packages: Computer ScienceComputer Science (R0)