TY - BOOK
T1 - Policing the Caribbean
T2 - Transnational Security Cooperation in Practice
AU - Bowling, Benjamin
N1 - Includes bibliographical references and indexes
PY - 2012/3/22
Y1 - 2012/3/22
N2 - This book explores the emergence of law enforcement and security practices that extend beyond the boundaries of the nation state. Perceptions of public safety and national sovereignty are shifting in the face of domestic, regional, and global insecurity, and with the emergence of transnational policing practices responding to drug trafficking and organised crime. The book examines how security threats are prioritised and the strategies that are put in place to respond to them, based on a detailed empirical case study of police and security sector organisations in the Caribbean. Transnational policing, one of the most significant recent developments in the security field, has brought about a number of changes in the organisation of criminal law enforcement in the Caribbean and other parts of the world. Drawing on interviews with chief police officers, customs, coastguard, immigration, security, military, and government officials, this book examines these changes, providing a unique insight into the work of overseas liaison officers from the UK and the USA, and their collaboration with local police and security agencies. This book assesses the extent to which a restructured transnational security infrastructure has enhanced the safety and wellbeing of the Caribbean islands, and other countries on the shores of the north Atlantic, and asks how we can ensure that policing beyond boundaries is accountable and good enough to make the world a safer place.
AB - This book explores the emergence of law enforcement and security practices that extend beyond the boundaries of the nation state. Perceptions of public safety and national sovereignty are shifting in the face of domestic, regional, and global insecurity, and with the emergence of transnational policing practices responding to drug trafficking and organised crime. The book examines how security threats are prioritised and the strategies that are put in place to respond to them, based on a detailed empirical case study of police and security sector organisations in the Caribbean. Transnational policing, one of the most significant recent developments in the security field, has brought about a number of changes in the organisation of criminal law enforcement in the Caribbean and other parts of the world. Drawing on interviews with chief police officers, customs, coastguard, immigration, security, military, and government officials, this book examines these changes, providing a unique insight into the work of overseas liaison officers from the UK and the USA, and their collaboration with local police and security agencies. This book assesses the extent to which a restructured transnational security infrastructure has enhanced the safety and wellbeing of the Caribbean islands, and other countries on the shores of the north Atlantic, and asks how we can ensure that policing beyond boundaries is accountable and good enough to make the world a safer place.
KW - Caribbean
KW - Drug trafficking
KW - Law enforcement
KW - National sovereignty
KW - Organised crime
KW - overseas liaison officers
KW - Public safety
KW - Security agencies
KW - Security practices
KW - Transnational policing practices
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84922967595&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199577699.001.0001
DO - 10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199577699.001.0001
M3 - Book
SN - 9780199577699
T3 - Clarendon studies in criminology
BT - Policing the Caribbean
PB - Oxford University Press
CY - Oxford
ER -