The UNLV Center for Gaming Research's Occasional Paper Series features papers on a variety of topics in gaming history, economics, and operations from scholars and members of the industry. This collection pulls together 17 papers originally published in the series, making them available in one book for the first time. Ranging from the mythologies surrounding notorious gangster Benjamin "Bugsy" Siegel to a look at the lessons that the financial crisis (should have) taught Las Vegas casinos to a cross-national examination of how governments spend the money they accrue from gambling proceeds and taxes, this collection draws on several disciplines, including history, sociology, philosophy, public policy, and business. Taken together, these papers provide a snapshot into the diversity of work currently being conducted in a variety of fields with the common focus of gambling, in its many manifestations.
Papers include:
1 "Seeking Value or Entertainment?" David G. Schwartz
2 "The Powerful Mythology Surrounding Bugsy Siegel" Larry Gragg
3 "The History of Baccarat" Theodore Whiting
4 "Nation, Corporation or Family?" Theodor Gordon
5 "The Promise of Gangster Glamour" Laura Cook Kenna
6 "Taking the Points" Frederick W. Krauss
7 "Gaming in Britain and America" Nicholas Tosney
8 "Where Locals Play" Rex J. Rowley
9 "Nevada Gaming Licensing" Robert D. Faiss and Gregory R. Gemignani
10 "Betting on the U.S. Market" Glenn Light, Karl Rutledge, and Quinton Singleton
11 "Souls/Soles of Signs" Darryl A. Smith
12 "Containment and Virtualization" Kah-Wee Lee
13 "Halos, Alibis and Community Development" Lynn Gidluck
14 "The Fiscal Forensics of the Las Vegas Strip" Dean M. Macomber
15 "From the Last Frontier to the New Cosmopolitan" Jessalynn Strauss
16 "Pyramids to Players Clubs" Oliver Lovat
17 "Moral Markets and the Problematic Proprietor" Christopher Wetzel
The book includes illustrations in select chapters, contributor biographies, and an index.