OAR@UM Collection: /library/oar/handle/123456789/136709 2026-06-18T14:10:03Z Experts' perspectives on youth radicalisation in Malta /library/oar/handle/123456789/145801 Title: Experts' perspectives on youth radicalisation in Malta Abstract: This research explores the factors contributing to youth radicalisation in Malta, focusing on the social, psychological, and environmental influences that shape adolescent vulnerability to extremist ideologies. It seeks to understand why some youths may be attracted to radical narratives, particularly within a local context that has received limited scholarly attention. Using a qualitative design, the study draws on expert interviews with nine professionals from education, criminology, psychology, law enforcement and policymaking. Thematic analysis was employed to examine how radicalisation is understood, which push and pull factors are perceived as most influential and how experts believe vulnerable youths can be supported. As part of this research process, a conceptual mind map was developed to visually represent the core dynamics influencing radicalisation across different stages of youth development. Findings indicate that Islamist and Far-right ideologies emerged as primary concerns among professionals, alongside rising concerns about misogyny, homophobia, and other emerging manifestations of intolerance and extremist sentiment. Participants also emphasised the influence of online content, perceived identity-based grievances, and social alienation as contributing factors. Prevention was viewed as most effective when grounded in education, early intervention, and stronger inter-agency collaboration across institutions. The research suggests that radicalisation in Malta is shaped by both individual vulnerabilities and broader systematic pressures. It concludes that addressing these challenges requires a more coordinated, youth-focused approach that reflects the specific realities of the local context. These findings have important implications for enhancing early intervention through crime prevention strategies, strengthening professional training, and informing more effective policies aimed at reducing the risk of youth radicalisation. Description: M.A. (Crim.)(Melit.) 2025-01-01T00:00:00Z Malta Police Force collaborative investigations into organised crime : challenges & solutions /library/oar/handle/123456789/145800 Title: Malta Police Force collaborative investigations into organised crime : challenges & solutions Abstract: This research aimed to examine the collaborative investigations conducted by the Malta Police Force (MPF) against organised crime (OC) locally, doing so by assessing the level of collaborative investigations and investigative challenges faced by the MPF in conducting collaborative investigations against OC and to provide the solutions for the challenges in collaboratively investigating OC locally. The research methodology was qualitative. Interviewing 10 participants from 5 different stakeholders. The primary data was analysed through thematic analysis from which three main themes emerged. The main themes were “It takes a Network to Defeat a Network”, “The Power of the Law” and “Resources”. With these themes providing a comprehensive understanding of interunit, interagency and international collaboration in OC investigations. Subsequently, identifying challenges alongside their solutions related to collaborative OC investigations. The main findings included that Malta is capable of conducting collaborative investigations against OC but which are inhibited by legal inadequacies, resources limitations, and social challenges such as ego, trust and competition. With their solutions including legal amendments, strategic resource management, soft skill training, adoption of operational security measures amongst other solutions. Recommendations are also provided for future academic research, including more in depth research regarding this research’s factors. With further research including supplementary quantitative research and comparative qualitative research. Moreover, a vast list of policy recommendations to address the identified challenges is provided. With such policy recommendations including the setting up of a national strategy, a national OC coordinator, legal amendments for Maltese legal procedures in investigatory and protectional aspects of OC cases, as well as investment in human and physical resources for all stakeholders. Overall, this research comprehensively examined collaborative investigations against OC locally. Establishing positive factors of local OC investigations but also the areas where they can be improved, by addressing the challenges of OC investigations experienced locally. Description: M.A. (Crim.)(Melit.) 2025-01-01T00:00:00Z Cash restrictions : effectiveness on combatting money laundering and terrorism finance in Malta /library/oar/handle/123456789/145799 Title: Cash restrictions : effectiveness on combatting money laundering and terrorism finance in Malta Abstract: This dissertation evaluates the effectiveness of Malta’s Use of Cash (Restriction) Regulations (Subsidiary Legislation 373.04) in addressing money laundering and terrorism financing. It examines the enforcement mechanisms and regulatory challenges associated with the legislation. Additionally, it considers the effects of the new European Union Regulation (EU) 2024/1624. Through qualitative analysis and stakeholder insights, the research identifies key deficiencies and proposes recommendations to enhance compliance and enforcement, contributing to ongoing policy discussions on anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing. The research includes a comparative analysis of Malta’s regulations with both international and EU frameworks, highlighting strengths, weaknesses, and areas for improvement. Semi-structured interviews with key stakeholders explore compliance practices, enforcement challenges, and the unintended consequences of cash restrictions. Findings reveal that while Subsidiary Legislation 373.04 provides a foundation for restricting illicit cash transactions; its effectiveness is limited by enforcement issues, regulatory gaps, and public misconceptions. To ensure the research credibility, a methodology was used that incorporated multiple strategies. A semi-structured interview framework, based on anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing literature, guided data collection, and pilot testing refined the interview schedule for clarity. A reflexive approach, incorporating memoing and peer debriefing, minimised bias and enhanced objectivity. Thematic analysis, facilitated by coding frameworks and software tools such as NVivo, enhanced transparency. Ethical considerations, including informed consent, confidentiality, and GDPR compliance, were followed. The research also evaluates Malta’s alignment with the EU-wide cash transaction limit under Regulation (EU) 2024/1624, noting that Malta’s experience can aid in adapting to the harmonised framework. However, the findings suggest that a one-size-fits-all EU regulation could be undermined if national-level enforcement mechanisms remain weak, particularly in member states lacking adequate training, digital infrastructure, or inter-agency coordination. The research proposes reforms in Maltese legislation, including enhanced data collection, specialised task forces, public education, improved inter-agency collaboration, stricter enforcement mechanisms, clearer guidelines on exemptions, and revisions to penalty structures to strengthen cash restriction implementation and ensure compliance with EU regulations. Description: M.A. (Crim.)(Melit.) 2025-01-01T00:00:00Z Do videogames cause violence? : investigating the views of the Maltese population /library/oar/handle/123456789/145797 Title: Do videogames cause violence? : investigating the views of the Maltese population Abstract: The debate on whether violence in videogames is a causation for real violent behaviour and crime has been on the forefront of news media and academic research for the past 40 years, with an abundance of academic literature debating whether this is the case or not. Research proving that videogames are a causation of real violence cite Bandura’s Social Learning Theory and the General Aggression Model as the basis for this argument. While much experimental research claim in establishing a causation between videogames and violence, other research shows no relationship between videogames and real violence. Scholars even criticise how publication bias in videogame violence causation research skew results to show a possible causation where there is none, or completely exclude results with no proof of any causation. While research on media use does exist, little to no research explores the societal lay understandings on this alleged causation of violence by videogames. This research aims to bridge the gap by exploring the Maltese perceptions on the subject. Description: M.A. (Crim.)(Melit.) 2025-01-01T00:00:00Z