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In: Policing and society: an international journal of research and policy, Band 27, Heft 3, S. 324-340
ISSN: 1477-2728
In: Jane's Intelligence review: the magazine of IHS Jane's Military and Security Assessments Intelligence centre, Band 18, Heft 12, S. 50-53
ISSN: 1350-6226
In the past two decades, the study of transnational crime has developed from a subset of the study of organized crime to its own recognized field of study, covering distinct societal threats and requiring a particular approach. This volume provides examples of transnational crime, and places them in a broad historical context, which has so far been missing from this field of study. The contributions to this comprehensive volume explore the causes and historical precursors of six main types of transnational crime: piracy human smuggling arms trafficking drug trafficking art and antique trafficking corporate crime The historical contributions demonstrate that transnational crime is not a novel phenomenon of recent globalization and that, beyond organized crime groups, powerful individuals, governments and business corporations have been heavily involved. Through a systematic historical and contextual analysis of these types of transnational crime, the contributions to this volume provide a fundamental understanding of why and how various forms of transnational crime are still present in the contemporary world.
In: Handbook of Transnational Crime & Justice, S. 47-64
This report discusses about Transnational Organized crime groups in Burma (Myanmar), that operates a multi billion dollar criminal industry that stretches across Southeast Asia.
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In: Social Justice Special Issue: Beyond Transnational Crime, Band 34, Heft 2, S. 111-124
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In: Sociology compass, Band 1, Heft 2, S. 485-498
ISSN: 1751-9020
AbstractThis paper reviews the scholarly literature that connects transnational crime and policing through a critical discussion of the terms used to describe them. It is argued that authorized discourses regarding transnational crime are selective and partial. Ultimately, this results in two sorts of failures in contemporary transnational policing. It is a positive failure insofar as the ramping up of policing power in response to a global crime panic has come at the expense of civil liberties and human rights. It is a negative failure insofar as the transnational policing capacity that has been developed is unable to respond to the very real criminological consequences that are part of the downside of globalization. The surveillant assemblage of the emerging global policing security complex is an awesome and unaccountable power legitimitated on the basis of specified folkdevils. However, and despite well‐publicized claims to success, due to its own internal organizational pathologies and institutional fragmentation, the policing security complex is capricious. The article concludes by arguing that critical the examination of the concepts that constitute transnational crime and policing is a crucial contribution to theories of global governance.
Histories of Transnational Crime provides a broad, historical framework for understanding the developments in research of transnational crime over the centuries. This volume provides examples of transnational crime, and places them in a broad historical context, which has so far been missing from this field of study. The contributions to this comprehensive volume explore the causes and historical precursors of six main types of transnational crime: -piracy -human smuggling -arms trafficking -drug trafficking -art and antique trafficking -corporate crime. The historical contributions demonstrat
In: Social justice: a journal of crime, conflict and world order, Band 34, Heft 2, S. 111-123
ISSN: 1043-1578, 0094-7571
Mackenzie, the author of the article and a senior researcher at the Scottish Centre for Crime and Justice Research at the University of Glasgow poses an argument of habitus (a form of "practical knowledge") the concept of which collects features of social existence such as disposition, agency, strategy, structural reproduction, body, mind, choice, and unconsciousness. The chapter bases habitus on international research of law and morality in criminal cases where the accused often misrepresent or hide (silence issue) certain facts in order to get "off the hook". All the research, however has reached little impact on the present situation in misrepresentations of habitus. The author examines this and other factors like looting based upon Bourdieu's analyses of such measures. L. Babiasz