Regulatory Regimes Preventing the Infiltration of Organised Crime into Lawful Occupations and Industries
Project Status:
Start Date:
Tabled in Parliament Date:
Project
In October 2014, the Commission was asked to examine and report on how regulation might stop organised crime from infiltrating occupations and industries.
Regulatory regimes are laws, regulations, policies and instruments that govern the entry into and conduct within an industry. They include licensing, registration requirements and fit-and-proper-person tests.
The VLRC reviewed various lawful occupations and industries in Victoria and elsewhere:
- to find out which regulatory regimes are effective
- to develop principles for assessing the risk of organised crime infiltrating a lawful occupation or industry.
From a consultation paper in June 2015 requesting submissions, the Commission received 32 written responses. We set up an advisory committee of relevant experts and consulted widely with a number of key stakeholders.
Our report, tabled in Parliament on 25 May 2016, concluded that there is no ‘one-size-fits-all approach’ to industry regulation and regulatory responses to infiltration by organised crime must be considered on an industry-to-industry basis. The links to the full report and other documents are below.
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Project Stage
- Terms of reference received
- Submissions and consultations
- Submissions closed
- Final Report
- Tabled in parliament
Publications
25/05/2016
25/05/2016
25/05/2016
01/08/2015
19/06/2015
19/06/2015
19/06/2015