This book came about originally as a result of a number of conversations between the editors – a lawyer, a criminologist, and a lawyer respectively – on the artifciality of disciplinary boundaries when it comes to organised and fnancial crime. These topics, it was agreed, are profoundly and inherently interdisciplinary in their reach and impact, touching not just law and criminology, but also the wider social sciences (including economics and sociology), the arts and humanities, and even science and technology. In this volume – which is centred frmly on the premise that organised crime and fnancial crime do not ‘belong’ to any single discipline – scholars from law, the social sciences and the humanities have been brought together to showcase a diverse range of perspectives on these complex and pressing global challenges. The third ‘pillar’ of the book, criminal justice, concerns the various responses to these challenges and is woven throughout in chapters authored by both academics and criminal justice practitioners at the coalface of the fght against these issues.