Foreword
Preface
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Foundations for a Global Criminology and Criminal Justice
Russell Smandych and Nick Larsen
Part 1: Perspectives on the Global Study of Crime and Criminal Justice
1. Comparing Cultures, Comparing Crime: Challenges, Prospects, and Problems for a Global Criminology
Susanne Karstedt
2. The Criminological Enterprise in Europe and the United States: A Contextual Exploration
Ineke Haen Marshall
3. Trouble in Paradise: Crime and Collapsed States in the Age of Globalization
Jean-Germain Gros
Part 2: Global Crime: Developments and Issues
4. The World Bank and Crimes of Globalization: A Case Study
David 0. Friedrichs and Jessica Friedrichs
5. Globalization of Criminal Justice in the Corporate Context
Michael J. Gilbert and Steve Russell
6. Bodies, Borders, and Sex Tourism in a Globalized World: A Tale of Two Cities—Amsterdam and Havana
Nancy A. Wonders and Raymond Michalowski
7. Stopping the Illegal Trafficking of Human Beings: How Transnational Police Work Can Stem the Flow of Forced Prostitution
Peter A. Mameli
Part 3: Global Trends in Policing and Security
8. Convergence of Policing Policies and Transnational Policing in Europe
Hartmut Aden
9. Policing Migration: A Framework for Investigating the Regulation of Global Mobility
Leanne Weber and Benjamin Bowling
10. The Transformation of Policing? Understanding Current Trends in Policing Systems
Trevor Jones and Tim Newburn
11. The Accountability of Transnational Policing Institutions: The Strange Case of Interpol
James Sheptycki
Part 4: Systems of Criminal Prosecution, the Courts, and Social Control
12. Prosecutorial Discretion and Plea Bargaining in the United States, France, Germany, and Italy: A Comparative Perspective
Yue Ma
13. The Police, the Prosecutor, and the Juge D'Instruction: Judicial Supervision in France, Theory and Practice
Jacqueline Hodgson
14. Iranian Criminal Justice Under the Islamization Project
Hassan Rezaei
15. Building a Post-War Justice System in Afghanistan
Ali Wardak
16. Social and Legal Control in China: A Comparative Perspective
Xiaoming Chen
Part 5: Convergence and Divergence in Criminal Justice and Penal Policy
17. Comparative Criminal Justice Policy-Making in the United States and the United Kingdom: The Case of Private Prisons
Trevor Jones and Tim Newburn
18. Prison Populations as Political Constructs: The Case of Finland, Holland, and Sweden
Hanns von Hofer
19. Drug Policy Developments Within the European Union: The Destabilizing Effects of Dutch and Swedish Drug Policies
Caroline Chatwin
Part 6: Challenges for a Global Criminology: Human Rights Crimes and International Criminal Justice
20. Dealing with the Legacy of Past War Crimes and Human Rights Abuses: Experiences and Trends
Ivan Simonovic
21. Advocacy and Scholarship in the Study of International War Crime Tribunals and Transitional Justice
Leslie Vinjamuri and Jack Snyder
22. War, Aggression, and State Crime: A Criminological Analysis of the Invasion and Occupation of Iraq
Ronald C. Kramer and Raymond J. Michalowski
Sources