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Multinational Crime - Terrorism, Espionage, Drug and Arms Trafficking (Paperback)
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Multinational Crime - Terrorism, Espionage, Drug and Arms Trafficking (Paperback)
Series: Studies in Crime, Law, and Criminal Justice
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When is a crime not a crime? Is espionage "spying" when national
security is at stake? Do governments participate in arms
trafficking when supplying revolutionaries the means to overthrow a
despot? In a departure from past research, Martin and Romano
explore multinational crime from a criminological perspective.
Proceeding from an interactionist as well as a socio-cultural
conflict theory, the authors argue that multinational crime is not
random violence. Instead, they contend that these offenses are
organized and systematic, cutting across national boundaries by
involving a minimum of two countries. The starting block for more
rigorous study of multinational systemic crime, this unusual volume
emphasizes the value of studying organizations involved in these
crimes, as well as the regional and global settings in which they
operate. Chapter 1 relates multinational crime to the other major
forms of crime studied by criminology and criminal justice. The
following two chapters describe four types of multinational
crime--drug trafficking, terrorism, espionage, and arms
trafficking. Chapter 4 reviews the interrelationship of such crimes
to the international scene; the role of values, interests, and
power; and the part of "national security" interests in limiting
information access. The authors then identify several problems in
theory construction and policy development. The last chapter
includes a description of three significant global regions: the
Golden Triangle of Southeast Asia, the Middle East, and the Andean
region of Colombia, Bolivia, and Peru. Multinational Crime responds
to a world paralyzed, held hostage by the perpetration of these
horrific offenses. Professionals and students in the areas of
criminology, political science, sociology, foreign policy,
international relations, foreign affairs, and policy studies are
sure to find this volume intense and vital reading. "For those
interested in a compact, well-written treatise on the subjects of
terrorism, espionage, and drugs and arms trafficking and their
interrelationships, this book will prove invaluable. . . .Starting
from issues related to definitional and perspective problems, the
authors set forth a paradigm that challenges many of the accepted
approaches to studying multinational criminal activity. . . .Of
particular interest is the expanding role played by governments,
and the point at which their actions become criminal, as when they
compound criminality by overlooking one criminal act in order to
stop another crime. . . .This book should draw the attention of
both practitioners and scholars, as well as policy-makers, for the
authors raise a number of compelling arguments for a new approach
to a better understanding of the threat of multinational crime."
--Criminal Justice International "I congratulate you both [John M.
Martin and Anne T. Romano] on an invaluable contribution to the
study of multinational crime, and the conceptual views you express
in its pages--which I fully support. These views are having a
profound effect on the shaping of our operational policy."
--Colonel A. D. Couperin, International Data Evaluation Program
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