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The United States and her allies have found themselves plunged into
'a war over [humanity's] future social and political organization'
with criminal challengers to the nation-state form. These new wars
are currently being fought globally with Al Qaeda, in Iraq with
shifting coalitions of criminal gangs, insurgents, and Jihadi
groups and throughout the Americas with the Maras (the first group
of 3rd GEN Gangs to emerge). More new wars are poised to develop
and the on-going ones are far from over, with more attacks upon the
homelands of the US and her allies expected. This cutting edge book
looks initially at the theoretical and legal side of criminal-state
and criminal-soldier emergence and growth, before focusing on
criminal-states and criminal-soldiers themselves, with particular
attention paid to Al Qaeda, Hizballah, Mara Salvatrucha (MS 13),
Caliphate and Mahdi concerns, Islamic Fundamentalist Use of
Beheadings, Criminalization of Russian State Security, Nuclear
Materials Trafficking, and Outlaw Private Security Firms. With the
contributions from international experts, this book makes for
critical reading for political scientists and criminal justice
students and researchers, policy makers, and military and law
enforcement practitioners. This book was previously published as a
special issue of Global Crime.
The United States and her allies have found themselves plunged into
'a war over [humanity's] future social and political organization'
with criminal challengers to the nation-state form. These new wars
are currently being fought globally with Al Qaeda, in Iraq with
shifting coalitions of criminal gangs, insurgents, and Jihadi
groups and throughout the Americas with the Maras (the first group
of 3rd GEN Gangs to emerge). More new wars are poised to develop
and the on-going ones are far from over, with more attacks upon the
homelands of the US and her allies expected. This cutting edge book
looks initially at the theoretical and legal side of criminal-state
and criminal-soldier emergence and growth, before focusing on
criminal-states and criminal-soldiers themselves, with particular
attention paid to Al Qaeda, Hizballah, Mara Salvatrucha (MS 13),
Caliphate and Mahdi concerns, Islamic Fundamentalist Use of
Beheadings, Criminalization of Russian State Security, Nuclear
Materials Trafficking, and Outlaw Private Security Firms. With the
contributions from international experts, this book makes for
critical reading for political scientists and criminal justice
students and researchers, policy makers, and military and law
enforcement practitioners. This book was previously published as a
special issue of Global Crime.
The book takes a hard hitting look at the drug wars taking place
in Mexico between competing gangs, cartels, and mercenary factions;
their insurgency against the Mexican state; the narco-violence and
terrorism that is increasingly coming over the border into the
United States, and its interrelationship with domestic prison and
street gangs. Analysis and response strategies are provided by
leading writers on 3GEN gang theory, counterterrorism,
transnational organized crime, and homeland security.
Narcos Over the Border is divided into three sections:
narco-opposing force (NARCO OPFOR) organization and technology use;
patterns of violence and corruption and the illicit economy; and
United States response strategies. The work also includes short
introductory essays, a strategic threat overview, an afterword and
selected references. Specific topics covered include: advanced
weaponry, internet use, kidnappings and assassinations, torture,
beheadings, and occultism, cartel and gang evolutionary patterns,
drug trafficking, street taxation, corruption, and border
firefights.
This book was published as a special issue of Small Wars and
Insurgencies.
This new book brings together leading terrorism scholars and
defence professionals to discuss the impact of networks on conflict
and war.
Post-modern terrorism and topics of global insurgency are also
comprehensively covered. The text is divided into four sections to
cover the key areas: introductory/overview, theory, terrorism and
global insurgency, Al Qaeda focus, and networks. Eminent
contributors include John Arquilla and David Ronfeldt, Brian
Jenkins, Stephen Sloan, Graham Turbiville, and Max Manwaring.
This book was previously published as a special issue of the
leading journal Low Intensity Conflict and Law Enforcement.
The intent behind this book was to bring together a team of defence
and national security scholars and real-world military and law
enforcement operators to focus on the topic of "Non-State Threats
and Future Wars." The book is divided into four main sections: The
first concerns theory. The second section concerns non-state
threats and case studies, providing an overview of non-state
threats ranging from organized crime networks to cartels, gangs and
warlords. The third section is based on counter-OPFOR (opposing
force) strategies which detail advanced concepts, urban battlespace
environmental perceptions, weaponry, intelligence preparation,
networked force structure and C41. The fourth and final section
contains an archival document from the late 1987 period concerning
early Fourth Epoch War theory, and never before published
interviews with Chechen commanders and officers who participated in
combat operations against Russian forces in the 1994-96 war.
Much has been written about the many economic benefits of
globalization and the triumph and spread of democratic liberalism
with the end of the Cold War, following the demise of the Soviet
Union. This work takes issue with such "wine and roses"
perspectives about the future of the Western democracies and their
faith-based views on the moral purity of a globalized marketplace.
It also questions many of the assumptions found in the status quo
reinforcing discipline of international political economy (IPE)-a
discipline that focuses on the formal and legitimate economies and
the facade they present that international relations and commerce
is still dominated and dictated solely by the old Westphalian state
centric system. Having highlighted these concerns, this book looks
at two major themes. The first theme focuses on the theoretical
perception that a "Dark Renaissance" is taking place globally-one
in which the Western liberal democracies and its citizens are ill
prepared to respond because it exists at the trans-civilization
level, bridging the modern to the post-modern world. The second
theme focuses on the actual process of state deconstruction that is
taking place. This process is leading to what may become the very
undoing of the democracies. Drawing together experts from a variety
of backgrounds, this work explores the increasing shift away from
formal based capitalism and evaluates through case studies how
different states are responding to the challenges they face. This
work will be of great interest to students and scholars of
international political economy.
Concerns over the changing nature of gangs and cartels and their
relationships to states in the late 20th and early 21st centuries
has resulted in the emergence of a scholarly body of work focused
on their national security threat potentials. This body of work,
utilizing the third generation gangs and third phase cartel
typologies, represents an alternative to traditional gang and
organized crime research and one that is increasingly influencing
the US defense community. Rather than being viewed only as
misguided youth and opportunistic criminals or, in their mature
forms, as criminal organizations with no broader social or
political agendas, more evolved gangs and cartels, are instead seen
as developing political, mercenary, and state-challenging
capacities. This evolutionary process has emerged due to the
growing illicit economy and other unintended consequences of
globalization.
This important anthology of writings by Robert J. Bunker and
John P. Sullivan draws upon a collection of their works from the
mid-1990s to the present with the addition of new essays written
specifically for this publication. The work will be of great
interest to academics and students in the fields of political
science and criminal justice and to military, law enforcement, and
governmental professionals and policy makers.
This book is a collection of new and previously published works
from a variety of publications, a full list of which is on the
Citation Information page.
This new book brings together leading terrorism scholars and
defence professionals to discuss the impact of networks on conflict
and war.
Post-modern terrorism and topics of global insurgency are also
comprehensively covered. The text is divided into four sections to
cover the key areas: introductory/overview, theory, terrorism and
global insurgency, Al Qaeda focus, and networks. Eminent
contributors include John Arquilla and David Ronfeldt, Brian
Jenkins, Stephen Sloan, Graham Turbiville, and Max Manwaring.
This book was previously published as a special issue of the
leading journal Low Intensity Conflict and Law Enforcement.
The intent behind this book was to bring together a team of defence
and national security scholars and real-world military and law
enforcement operators to focus on the topic of "Non-State Threats
and Future Wars." The book is divided into four main sections: The
first concerns theory. The second section concerns non-state
threats and case studies, providing an overview of non-state
threats ranging from organized crime networks to cartels, gangs and
warlords. The third section is based on counter-OPFOR (opposing
force) strategies which detail advanced concepts, urban battlespace
environmental perceptions, weaponry, intelligence preparation,
networked force structure and C41. The fourth and final section
contains an archival document from the late 1987 period concerning
early Fourth Epoch War theory, and never before published
interviews with Chechen commanders and officers who participated in
combat operations against Russian forces in the 1994-96 war.
Concerns over the changing nature of gangs and cartels and their
relationships to states in the late 20th and early 21st centuries
has resulted in the emergence of a scholarly body of work focused
on their national security threat potentials. This body of work,
utilizing the third generation gangs and third phase cartel
typologies, represents an alternative to traditional gang and
organized crime research and one that is increasingly influencing
the US defense community. Rather than being viewed only as
misguided youth and opportunistic criminals or, in their mature
forms, as criminal organizations with no broader social or
political agendas, more evolved gangs and cartels, are instead seen
as developing political, mercenary, and state-challenging
capacities. This evolutionary process has emerged due to the
growing illicit economy and other unintended consequences of
globalization. This important anthology of writings by Robert J.
Bunker and John P. Sullivan draws upon a collection of their works
from the mid-1990s to the present with the addition of new essays
written specifically for this publication. The work will be of
great interest to academics and students in the fields of political
science and criminal justice and to military, law enforcement, and
governmental professionals and policy makers. This book is a
collection of new and previously published works from a variety of
publications, a full list of which is on the Citation Information
page.
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