Buch, Englisch, 972 Seiten, Format (B × H): 157 mm x 236 mm, Gewicht: 1497 g
Thirty-Five Years of Research on Police, Judicial and Administrative Cooperation
Buch, Englisch, 972 Seiten, Format (B × H): 157 mm x 236 mm, Gewicht: 1497 g
ISBN: 978-90-04-28193-6
Verlag: Brill
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
Foreword; Curriculum Vitae: Prof. em. dr. dr. h.c. Cyrille Fijnaut; Introduction;
I. A New Field of Academic Research in Europe
1. Seeking Refuge in Power? A Historical Study of the Police as a Political Institution
1. How to Reconstruct the Political History of a Police System?; 2. The Evolution of the Modern Police System in Western Europe: A Model; 3. A Few Comments on this Model; 4. A Taste of the Political History of the Belgian Police;
2. The Limits of Direct Police Co-operation in Western Europe
1. Between Police Dream and Political Action: EUROPOL and TREVI; 2. EUROPOL; 3. Towards a New Organization of General Police Co-operation in Western Europe;
3. The Internationalization of Criminal Investigation in Western Europe
1. Introduction; 2. An Image of the Past; 3. The Developments over the Past Two Decades; 4. Conclusion;
4. Police Co-operation within Western Europe
1. Introduction;2. A Flashback to the Past; 3. Undiscussed Issues and Forgotten Problems; 4. The Economic Unification of Western Europe in 1992 and the Further Internationalisation of Police Co-operation; 5. Conclusion;
5. The International Criminal Police Commission and the Fight Against Communism, 1923–1945
1. Introduction; 2. The Anti-Communist Orientation of International Police Co-operation
before 1923; 3. The Foundation of the ICPC; 4. The Re-Emergence of Interpol: Some Final Remarks;
II. Research and Policy in a Transatlantic Perspective
6. The François Case: Considerations Following the Court’s Decision
1. Introduction; 2. The Creation of the BCI and the NBD; 3. The NBD: The Domestic Police Counterpart; 4. The Influence of the US Foreign Police Policy; 5. Final Remarks of the First Analysis
7. The Normalization of Undercover Policing in the West: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives
1. Undercover: An Enduring Ingredient of Modern Policing; 2. Developments in the United States; 3. Undercover Returns to Europe; 4. The Articles;
8. The Analysis and Containment of Organized Crime in Europe: An Interview with Cyrille Fijnaut
9. Organized Crime: A Comparison Between the United States of America and Western Europe
1. Introduction; 2. The Debate in the United States; 3. The Debate in Western Europe; 4. General Conclusion;
10. Organized Crime: The Forms It Takes, Background and Methods Used to Control it in Western Europe and the United States
1. Introduction; 2. The Forms in which Organized Crime Appears; 3. The Background of Organized Crime; 4. Methods to Control Organized Crime; 5. Conclusion;
11. Organized Crime and Anti-Organized Crime Efforts in Western Europe: An Overview
1. Introduction; 2. Images of Organized Crime in Western Europe; 3. The Containment of Organized Crime in Western Europe; 4. Conclusion;
12. The Italian Mafia in Belgium: An Analysis of the Bongiorno-Steinier Case
1. Introduction; 2. The Migration of the Italian Mafia to North-Western Europe; 3. The Grip of the Italian Mafia on the Construction Industry in New York; 4. The Bongiorno-Steinier Case: The Mafia in Belgium?; 5. In Conclusion: Some Considerations Regarding Policy;
13. The Italian Mafia in the Netherlands
14. Researching Organized Crime
1. Introduction; 2. The Necessity of Research; 3. The Possibility of Research; 4. Outside and Inside the Underworld; 5. Outside and Inside the Police; 6. The Go-between: The Newspapers; 7. My Own Research in Rotterdam; 8. Conclusion;
15. Organized Crime in the Netherlands
1. Introduction; 2. The Drug Trade; 3. Trafficking in Women; 4. Trafficking in Firearms; 5. Car Theft; 6. Forms of Fraud; 7. Conclusion;
16. The Administrative Approach to Organised Crime in Amsterdam: Background and Developments
1. Introduction; 2. The Transatlantic Connection: New York Policy on the Cosa Nostra; 3. Turnaround in Dutch Views circa 1990; 4. First Initiatives in Amsterdam; 5. The Fijnaut/Bovenkerk Report on Organised Crime in the Inner City; 6. European Union Policy on Prevention of Organised Crime;
III. The Emerging Criminal Policy of the European Union
17. Empirical Criminological Research on Organised Crime: The State of Affairs in Europe
1. Introduction; 2. The Actual State of Empirical Research; 3. Why Such a Paucity of Original Research?; 4. In Conclusion: Some Observations on the Future of Empirical Organised Crime Research;
18. Organized Crime: A Threat for the European Union?
1. Introduction; 2. The Definition and Investigation of Organized Crime; 3. The Problem of Organized Crime in the European Union; 4. Conclusion;
19. The ‘Communitization’ of Police Cooperation in Western Europe
1. Introduction; 2. The Existing Framework for International Police Cooperation; 3. The German Position in the Debate on the Reform of Police Cooperation in Western Europe; 4. The Significance of the German Initiative Towards the European Communities; 5. Conclusion;
20. The Schengen Treaties and European Police Co-operation
1. Introduction; 2. Preliminaries for a Discussion about the Significance of the Schengen Treaties; 3. The Innovative Character of the Schengen Convention; 4. From the Schengen Treaties to the Treaty on European Union: The Foundation, Position, Task and Powers of Europol; 5. Final Remarks;
21. Police Cooperation Along the Belgian–Dutch Border
1. Introduction; 2. The Formal Arrangements of Police Cooperation; 3. Factual Forms of Police Cooperation; 4. Conclusion;
22. International Policing in Europe: Present and Future
1. Introduction; 2. The Evolution of International Police Co-operation; 3. The Establishment of Transnational Police Systems; 4. The Harmonisation of national policing; 5. The Americanisation of Policing in Europe; 6. An Evaluation of the Present Situation in Western Europe; 7. The Democratic Viewpoint; 8. The Legal Viewpoint; 9. The Operational Viewpoint; 10. The European Perspective for the Future; 11. International Policing within the European Economic Space; 12. Police Co-operation and Harmonisation with the Non-EFTA States: A Role for the Council of Europe; 13. The United Nations and International Policing in Europe; 14. Concluding Remarks
23. Policing International Organized Crime in the European Union
1. Introduction; 2. The Problem of Organized Crime; 3. The Restructuring of Police Cooperation; 4. Some Comments on the Gap between Rhetoric and Reality;
24. Intergovernmental Cooperation on Drug Control: Debates on Europol
1. The Treaty of Maastricht with Respect to Europol; 2. The European Parliament and Europol; 3. Conclusion;
25. Transnational Organized Crime and Institutional Reform in the European Union: the Case of Judicial Cooperation
1. The Problem of Organized Crime in the EU; 2. Judicial Cooperation before the Treaty of Amsterdam; 3. The Treaty of Amsterdam and Judicial Cooperation; 4. Conclusions;
26. A European Public Prosecution Service: Comments on the Green Paper
1. Introductory Remarks; 2. The Appearance and Basis of the European PPS; 3. A Clay Base and an Empty Figure; 4. Mandatory or Discretionary Prosecution Principle?; 5. Harmonization of the Law of Evidence; 6. Conclusion;
27. Police Co-operation and the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice
1. Introduction; 2. Police Co-operation under the Third Pillar: A General Characterization; 3. Three Important Issues in the Current Development of Police Co-operation; 4. Police Co-operation and (Organized) Crime; 5. Visions for the Future of the European Convention and the European Commission; 6. Conclusion;
IV. The Quantum Leap in the European Area of Freedom, Security and Justice
28. Organised Crime in Europe and Beyond: Some General Considerations
1. Organised Crime: A Complicated and Controversial Topic; 2. Organised Crime: A Multifaceted Phenomenon; 3. Organised Crime: An Important Glocal (Global and Local) Challenge; 4. Concluding Remarks;
29. Organised Crime in Europe: A Comparative Synthesis of its History
1. The Difficulty and Importance of Historical Research, Comparative or Otherwise; 2. The Dynamics of the History of Organised Crime; 3. The Necessary Embeddedness of Organised Crime in Society; 4. The Diversity of Organised Crime in the Past; 5. Some Building Blocks for a Historical Classification of Criminal Groups; 6. The Illegal Activities of Gangs and Bandits;
30. Organised Crime in Europe: An Introduction to Sources and Literature
1. The Level of the Council of Europe; 2. The Level of the European Union; 3. The Level of the Regions: The Baltic Sea Region and the South-Eastern European Region; 4. The Level of Individual States: Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Belgium and the United Kingdom; 5. Organised Crime in Europe: A Jigsaw Puzzle with Many Missing Pieces;
31. Organised Crime in Europe: A Picture of The Initiatives of the European Union and the Council of Europe
1. The Fight against Organised Crime in the ‘Area of Freedom, Security and Justice’; 2. The General Policy of the European Union on Organised Crime; 3. The Growing Relevance of the Fight against Organised Crime in Foreign Policy;
32. Organised Crime and Its Control Policies
1. The History of the Concept; 2. Organised Crime Patterns; 3. Control Policies;
33. Introduction of the New York Double Strategy to Control Organised Crime in the Netherlands and the European Union
1. Introduction; 2. The Innovative Approach to Tackling Organised Crime in New York; 3. Application of the American Double Strategy in the Netherlands; 4. Introduction of the Double Strategy in the Meuse-Rhine Euroregion; 5. The Policy of the European Union to Contain Organised Crime; 6. Conclusion;
34. The Attacks on 11 September 2001, and the Immediate Response of the European Union and the United States
1. The Policy of the European Union before 11 September; 2. The Policy of the United States before 11 September; 3. The Response of the European Union to the Attacks; 4. The Response of the United States to the Attacks; 5. The Policy of the European Union in the Future;
35. Cooperation Between the Member States of the European Union in Combating International Islamist Terrorism
1. Introduction; 2. Underestimating the Threat of Islamist Terrorism; 3. The threat of Islamist terrorism; 4. The Strengths and Weaknesses of the EU’s Policy; 5. To Conclude;
36. Intelligence Agencies in Europe and the United States: Their Reorientation after the Fall of the Berlin Wall and 11 September 2001
1. Some Thoughts on the General History of Intelligence Agencies in Europe; 2. Some Thoughts on the History of Intelligence Agencies in the United States; 3. The Reform of US Intelligence Agencies (and the Associated Debate); 4. The Consequences for the Intelligence Agencies in Western Europe; 5. Conclusion;
37. Exercising Supervision over Intelligence Services in a Historical and Comparative Perspective
1. Introduction; 2. Several examples from the history of political intelligence activities; 3. Differences are Too Great for Organising the (In)direct Supervision in a Uniform Way; 4. Conclusion;
38. Controlling Organized Crime and Terrorism in the European Union
1. Introduction; 2. A Picture of these Phenomena in the EU; 3. An Overview of the Policy Measures; 4. The Possible Role of the Constitutional Treaty; 5. Conclusion;
39. The Hague Programme and Police Cooperation Between the Member States of the EU
1. Introduction; 2. The Key Points in the Hague Programme; 3. The Transformation of the ‘Hague’ Police Policy into an Action Plan; 4. Implementation of the Action Plan: Where Things Stand Today; 5. Conclusion;
40. Revolution or Evolution through the Treaty of Lisbon: Police Cooperation in Europe in a Broader Historical Context
1. The Early History of Police Cooperation in Europe; 2. Turbulent Times (1975 to 2005); 3. The Treaty of Lisbon; 4. Conclusion;
41. The Meuse–Rhine Euroregion: A Laboratory for Police and Judicial Cooperation in the European Union
1. Introduction; 2. A Portrait of the Meuse-Rhine Euroregion; 3. The History of Law Enforcement Cooperation in the Euroregion; 4. The Framework of the Treaty on the European Union; 5. Recent Bilateral, Trilateral and Multilateral Conventions on Police Cooperation; 6. Enhancing Police and Judicial Cooperation in the Meuse-Rhine Euroregion; 7. The Potential Impact of the Lisbon Treaty and Future Group Reports; 8. Conclusion;
42. Twenty Years Ago: The Assassinations of Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino
43. The European Parliament and Organised Crime: The Impending Failure of the Alfano Committee
44. The Past, Present and Future of General Police Cooperation within the European Union
1. Introduction; 2. A Look Back at the Recent Past; 3. From Maastricht via Amsterdam and Tampere to The Hague; 4. The Treaty of Lisbon and Police Cooperation; 5. Conclusion;
45. The Refugee Crisis: The End of Schengen?
V. Important Issues in the Framework of the United Nations
46. The UN Convention and the Global Problem of Organized Crime
1. Introduction; 2. Three Comments on the Convention; 3. The Limits of Our Knowledge about Organized Crime in the World; 4. The Significance of the Convention for Research into Organized Crime; 5. Conclusion;
47. Transnational Organized Crime
1. Introduction; 2. The Notion of Transnational Organized Crime; 3. The Contemporary Manifestations of Organized Crime; 4. Policies to Contain Organized Crime; 5. Concluding Remarks;
48. The Globalisation of Police and Judicial Cooperation: Drivers, Substance and Organisational Arrangements, Political Complications
1. Introduction; 2. Drivers of the Globalisation of Police and Judicial Cooperation; 3. The Institutional Contexts of Police and Judicial Cooperation; 4. The Political Complications of Cooperation; 5. Conclusion;
49. The Role of the Police Worldwide in the Containment of the Illegal Production, the Illegal trade and the Illegal Possession of Small Arms and Light Weapons
1. Introduction; 2. The SALW Problem: A Glocal Problem; 3. UN Policies and the Fight against the Trade in (Illegal) Weapons; 4. A Typical Example: The EU and the SALW Problem; 5. Towards a More Prominent Role for the Police in Dealing with the SALW Problem; 6. Conclusions and Recommendations;
50. Drug Trafficking
1. Introduction; 2. Illegal Drug Markets Today: Some Figures; 3. The Rise of the International Drug Control Regime and the Expansion of Illegal Drug Markets; 4. Production of Major Illegal Drugs; 5. Cross-border Trafficking of Drugs; 6. Smuggling of Heroin; 7. Smuggling of Cocaine; 8. Smuggling of Synthetic Drugs; 9. Smuggling of Cannabis; 10. Drug Distribution; 11. Policies against Drug Trafficking; 12. Concluding Remarks;
51. Legalisation of Cannabis in Some American States: A Challenge for the European Union and its Member States?