Fighting Terrorism and Drugs is an examination of European
states in their fight against terrorism and drugs, from the 1960s
up to the present day.
J rg Friedrichs explores what makes large European states
willing or unwilling to participate in international police
cooperation against terrorism and drugs. The book examines
forty-eight case studies, with particular regard to the policy
preferences of the four largest and most politically important EU
Member States: Britain, France, Germany, and Italy.
The author argues that if a real understanding of international
cooperation is to develop, it is important to understand what
individual states want and why they want it. To explain state
preferences, Friedrichs considers interests, institutions and ideas
from domestic, national and international levels that can affect
state preferences either positively or negatively.
This theoretically coherent book looks at international police
cooperation from a truly international perspective and will be of
interest to students and scholars of international relations,
terrorism, criminology, international law and European
integration.
General
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