Organised crime in general and the criminal economy in particular constitute the primary driver of many forms of crime and a serious systemic threat to Sweden. Its impact extends to undermining gender equality and limiting access to public and private services, affecting in particular the most vulnerable in society. Sweden still has no optimal ability to identify, define, manage and reduce vulnerabilities that are economically exploited by organised crime. One identified area of development is the need to strengthen specialised knowledge to analyse and manage criminal finances and a growing need for integrated skills development and strategic interaction between relevant actors to effectively prevent and combat organised crime. In light of these challenges, the ESF project Sweden against organised crime (SMOB) is being implemented. SMOB is a cross-sectoral initiative that aims to strengthen the work against organised crime with a comprehensive national investment in knowledge and skills development against financial crime and criminal economy. Based on the identified problem picture, the SMOB will strengthen the skills of both women and men involved in the fight against organised crime, strengthen analytical capacity at individual and organisational level, and establish a national social council that brings together authorities, industry and workers' organisations against organised crime. These efforts will strengthen the position of employees in the labour market. The project will also launch a national strategic forum for a public-private partnership to maximise society's response to the economic infrastructure of organised crime. The integration of the project's efforts at individual, organisational and societal level also creates a synergy effect that directly contributes to strengthening society's overall resilience. The project approach harnesses and harnesses the overall strength of all levels of society and fills the gaps and interfaces between the activities and responsibilities of the different actors for the benefit of the national joint work against criminal economy. The aim of the project is to create structures that in the course of the project become financially self-sustaining components for a national competence institution against organised crime.