“…The dysfunctionality of post-Soviet legal systems shortly after collapse of the USSR partly conditioned emergence and rise of informal governance in the form of the Russian Mafia (Varese, 2001;Volkov, 2016) Moreover, in these circumstances, legal institutions were perceived as unreliable and people preferred the informal rules, norms and practices that had emerged during the Soviet times (Galligan & Kurkchiyan, 2003;Ledenova, 2006). Lotspeich (1995, quoted in Slade andLight, 2015) argues that crime is a product of specific transition, such as weakness in law enforcement, unclear regulation of economic activity, lack of property rights protection and decline in living standards. On the other hand, whether communism, capitalism or transition was to blame for the crime waves in the former Soviet Union, the region is still dealing with the legacies of the initial post-independence crime waves (Slade and Light, 2015).…”