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Global Policing
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Global Policing


Other Titles in:
Police Studies

December 2011 | 192 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd

In the globally networked society, police power is no longer constrained by the borders of the nation state: it has globalized. Global Policing shows how security threats have been constructed by powerful actors to justify the creation of a new global policing architecture and how the subculture of policing shapes the world system.

Demonstrating how a theory of global policing is central to understanding global governance, the text explores:

  • The 'new security agenda' focused on serious organized crime and terrorism and how this is transforming policing.
  • The creation of global organizations such as Interpol, regional entities such as Europol, and national policing agencies with a transnational reach.
  • The subculture of the 'global cops', blurring boundaries between police, private security, military and secret intelligence agencies.
  • The reality of transnational policing on the ground, its effectiveness, legitimacy, accountability and future development.

Written by two leading international experts who bring cutting-edge theoretical debates to life with case studies and examples, Global Policing will prove captivating reading for students and scholars in criminology, criminal justice, international relations, law and sociology.

 
Theorising Global Policing
 
The Problems of Global Policing
 
Policing Social Theory
 
Policing and the Social Contract
 
Policing and Political Theory
 
Policing and Law
 
Colonial Policing
 
Types of Transnational Policing
 
Conclusion: Policing an Insecure World
 
Policing and the Transnational-State-System
 
The Changing Morphology of the State
 
Jurisdictional Sovereignty and Functional Diversity in Policing
 
Agenda Setting and Transnational Policing Priorities
 
Legal Discourse and Law-Making in International Police Co-Operation
 
Developments in Europe
 
Developments in the United States
 
Multi-Agency Co-Operation: The Military, Security and Private Sectors
 
Conclusion: Policing the New World Order
 
The Global Policing Architecture
 
Global Police Agencies
 
Regional Police Agencies
 
National Policing Hubs
 
Private Transnational Policing
 
Global Policing
 
Conclusion
 
The Occupational Subcultures of Global Policing
 
Police Liaison Officers and the Transnational Space Between
 
Subcultural Theory and Policing
 
The Parameters of Policing Subculture
 
Meet the Global Cops
 
The Varied Occupational Character of Global Cops
 
Global Policing, Subculture and Accountability
 
Conclusion: Occupational Policing Subcultures - Global Thoughts/Local Acts
 
Global Policing in Practice
 
Policing Transnational Spaces
 
Policing Border Zones
 
Policing the Oceans
 
Policing Cyberspace
 
Policing Mega-Events
 
Policing Transnational Flows
 
Policing People: Migrants, Criminals, Terrorists and other Suspect Populations
 
Policing Drugs and Guns
 
Policing Money
 
Conclusion: The Consequences of Global Policing
 
Conclusion: The Global Cops Have Arrived

This book is a massively impressive intellectual achievement, by two authors whose earlier work has established them as leading experts on globalisation’s impact on policing. Compact, clear, readable yet scholarly, this book brings to fruition their extensive empirical research projects on transnational policing in a highly informative, empirically grounded, sophisticated theoretical synthesis. It is a must-read for anyone in the policing field, around the globe.

Robert Reiner
British Journal of Criminology

This concise, accessible and clear analysis of the changing relations between police and citizens in a global age is both innovative in its approach and a superb teaching text. Global Policing will serve for many years as the main reference work in the field.

Katja Franko Aas
Professor of Criminology, University of Oslo

 

This short book certainly takes issue with several comfortable assumptions and whets the appetite for more discussion on the topic. I foresee several doctoral studies being born from this embryonic volume.

The Criminal Lawyer Journal

Written in a very accessible style, (the discussion regarding Policing and the Social Contract in Chapter 1 is one of the most succinct yet informative pieces I have read on what can be a very complex matter) and from authors with established pedigree within the field, this book will fill in many gaps for readers in this topic, whether they are academics, students, or police practitioners. Despite being a relatively slim volume for a topic of this magnitude (180 pages in total, including indexes etc.), I found it to be both informative and thought provoking throughout... This book is a very useful addition to any police library, not just to enlighten people about what happens at a global level, but how this influences and is, in turn influenced by, policing at the local level.

Prof. Colin Rogers

Global Policing is a massively impressive academic achievement...It is right at the forefront of, and is one of the most important developments in, work on policing. This book is very informative, empirically grounded, and brings all this to bear in a sophisticated, theoretical analysis.

Robert Reiner
Emeritus Professor of Criminology, LSE

This outstanding study emphasizes how global policing represents a vast web of power within which coercion and surveillance are conducted by policing agents, who not only operate with increasing global mobility, but who are also connected by technology, complex institutional links and shared subcultural values. In Global Policing, Bowling and Sheptycki have made an invaluable contribution to debates of policing, as well as to those of global governance. With wide interdisciplinary relevance, this book will lend itself to both the researcher and the student.

Conor O’Reilly
Theoretical Criminology

An ideal book for students which will assist them in understanding the plural and global nature of the police function

Mr Peter Andrew Doyle
School of Sport, Health & Outdoor Education (Swansea), University of Wales, Trinity St David
July 4, 2019

An accessible book offering comprehensive coverage of the key dimensions of global policing including unpicking the relationship between local, national, regional and global elements. This book is being adopted as recommended reading across a number of modules related to the field of critical criminology studies.

Miss Samantha Fletcher
Sociology, Staffordshire University
April 13, 2015

A good text for second year policing module covering cross border policing issues.

Mrs Helen Easton
Department of Social & Policy Studies, London South Bank University
May 7, 2014

A very thoughtful text that raises a number of issues worthy of discussion with regards to the globalisation of policing.

Dr Ian Pepper
School of Social Sciences and Law, University of Teesside
March 13, 2013

Sample Materials & Chapters

Chapter One


Benjamin Bowling

Ben Bowling is Professor of Criminology & Criminal Justice at King's College London where he served as Acting Dean and Deputy Dean of the Dickson Poon School of Law (2014-16). Prior to joining King’s as Lecturer in Law in 1999, Ben was a lecturer at the University of Cambridge Institute of Criminology, Assistant Professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice (City University of New York) and Senior Research Officer in the Home Office. He has held visiting positions at Fitzwilliam College Cambridge, Humboldt University, University of Paris 2, University of the West Indies, Monash, and the East China University of Political Science... More About Author

James W.E. Sheptycki

His special research expertise revolves around issues of transnational crime and policing. He has written on a variety of substantive criminological topics including domestic violence, serial killers, money laundering, drugs, public order policing, organized crime, police accountability, intelligence-led policing, witness protection, risk and insecurity. He is currently engaged in research concerning ‘guns, crime and social order’. More About Author

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