Handbook of transnational crime & justice /

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Bibliographic Details
Imprint:Thousand Oaks, Calif. : Sage Publications, 2004.
Description:xvi, 512 p. : ill., maps ; 26 cm.
Language:English
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/5516558
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Varying Form of Title:Handbook of transnational crime and justice
Transnational crime & justice
Other authors / contributors:Reichel, Philip L.
ISBN:0761926224 (cloth)
Notes:Includes bibliographical references and index.
Table of Contents:
  • Part I. Introduction
  • Ch. 1. A Historical Overview of Transnational Crime
  • Ch 2. Comparing Crime and Justice
  • Part II. Transnational Crime in the 21st Century
  • Ch 3. Measuring Transnational Crime
  • Ch 4. Terrorism in Transition
  • Ch 5. Money Laundering
  • Ch 6. The Illicit Traffic in Plundered Antiquities
  • Ch 7. Computer Crime in a Brave New World
  • Ch 8. Transnational Environmental Crime
  • Ch 9. Drug Trafficking as a Transnational Crime
  • Ch 10. Trafficking in Human Beings and Smuggling of Migrants
  • Ch 11. War Crimes, Crimes against Humanity, and Genocide in International Criminal Law
  • Part III. Cross-National and International Efforts to Combat Transnational Crime
  • Ch 12. Comparative Overview of Policing, Courts, and Corrections
  • Ch 13. International Instruments on Co-operation in Responding to Transnational Crime
  • Ch 14. "Wild Beasts Without Nationality": The Uncertain Origins of Interpol, 1898-1914
  • Ch 15. International Cooperation in Policing
  • Ch 16. Adjudicating International Crimes
  • Ch 17. From Anti-Colonialism to Neocolonialism: A Brief Political-Economic History of Transnational Concern about Corrections
  • Part IV. Regional and Special Issues
  • Ch 18. Organized Crime in Africa
  • Ch 19. Organized Crime in Asia
  • Ch 20. Organized Crime in Europe
  • Ch 21. Organized Crime in Latin America
  • Ch 22. Organized Crime in North America
  • Ch 23. Juvenile Justice in the International Arena
  • Ch 24. Symbolic Law, Isolationism, and the Death Penalty
  • Foreword