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Machine generated contents note: 1.Property rights and the regulation of immigrant labour -- 2.Private property relations and regulating the immigration-labour nexus -- 3.Private law, private property arrangements and inclusivity -- 4.Substantive inequality to contract? -- 5.Agents, pirates or slavers -- 6.Regulatory preferencing: a comparative study
In: International political economy series
Machine generated contents note: IntroductionNew Moralities for International Criminal JusticeActivating Victim Constituency in ICJTruth and Responsibility v Fact and LiabilityTransformed Process Through Enhanced Discretionary PowerAccountability FrameworksJustice as Decision-making: Principal Pathways of InfluenceLegitimacy, Justice and GovernanceReferences
Crime is becoming as much a feature of the emergent globalized culture as other forms of consumerism. The Globalization of Crime presents an integrated theory of crime and social context and is the first book to challenge existing analyses of crime in the context of globalization
On a contracting world stage, crime is a major player in globalization and is as much a feature of the emergent globalized culture as are other forms of consumerism. The Globalization of Crime charts crime's evolution. It analyses how globalization has enhanced material crime relationships such that they must be understood on the same terms as any other significant market force. Trends in criminalization, crime and social development, crime and social control, the political economy of crime, and crime in transitional cultures are all examined in order to understand the role of crime as an agent of social change and present an integrated theory of crime and social context. This was the first book to challenge existing analyses of crime in the context of global transition, and show that crime is as much a force for globalization as globalization is a force for crime
In: SMU Centre for AI & Data Governance Research Paper No. 2020/07
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In: SMU Centre for AI & Data Governance Research Paper No. 2020/09
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In: Singapore Management University School of Law Research Paper No. 7/2020
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