Globalization & crime
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Globalization & crime
(Key approaches to criminology)
SAGE, 2007
- : pbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
What is the impact of globalization on crime and its control?
Globalization and Crime provides a comprehensive and accessible account of the consequences of globalization in the post 9/11 world. It explores crime in the context of increasing international interconnectivity. It explains theories around globalization and how these shed light upon the study of crime. Furthermore, the book examines the challenges the various global flows represent for the nature of governance, state sovereignty and crime control.
Presenting an expert and interdisciplinary summary of complex debates, this book addresses a variety of highly topical issues, including:
- The global war on terror
- Transnational organized crime
- Human smuggling and trafficking
- Global surveillance and policing
- Cybercrime
- Immigration
As part of the Key Approaches to Criminology series, Globalization and Crime offers key pedagogic features ranging from chapter overviews and key terms to study questions and suggestions for further debate. Concise and easy-to-read, this book will prove essential reading for students and academics in criminology, sociology, geography and other social sciences.
'The long awaited synthesis of the sociological literature on globalization together with contemporary criminiological theory. It untimitely manages to be both a useful teaching tool, and a significant contribution to contemporary theorizing about the global system.'
Professor James Sheptycki, York University, Canada
'An indispensable text for criminology students and researchers'
Dr Maggy Lee, Universities of Essex and Hong Kong
Table of Contents
Crime, Fear and Social Exclusion in the Global Village
Global Mobility and Human Traffic
Urban Criminology and the Global City
The 'Deviant Immigrant'
Transnational Crime and Crime Wars
Beyond the State?
Governing Cyberspace
Criminology between the Local, the National and the Global
by "Nielsen BookData"