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Maritime Crime and Policing

Edited by: Yarin Eski, Martin Wright

ISBN13: 9781032022123
Published: October 2024
Publisher: Routledge
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Paperback (Hardback in 2023)
Price: £39.99
Hardback edition , ISBN13 9781032022116



This is a Print On Demand Title.
The publisher will print a copy to fulfill your order. Books can take between 1 to 3 weeks. Looseleaf titles between 1 to 2 weeks.

This book offers a unique and scholarly perspective on a little studied subject: maritime crime and policing. The seas and oceans cover 70 percent of the earth’s surface, and 90 percent of world trade by volume travels by sea. Furthermore, the refugee crisis has produced an in-flow of people attempting to find a better life, particularly in Northwest Europe and the UK, which has had an impact on the maritime domains of European ports. While there has been attention paid to the role of maritime policing by scholars in maritime security studies, little attention has been paid by criminologists and policing studies scholars. This book aims to fill this gap.

Bringing together a range of international scholars, this book covers a variety of topics pertinent to maritime crime and its policing, such as fraud, piracy and armed robbery at sea, illegal and unregulated fishing, smuggling, people trafficking, illegal immigration, illegal dumping and pollution, arms trafficking, terrorism, and cargo theft. It brings together new perspectives on several key criminological themes such as transnational organised crime, criminalisation and securitization, and provides a bold new direction for the landlocked discipline of criminology and policing studies.

An accessible and compelling read, this book will be of interest to students and scholars of criminology, policing, sociology, politics, migration studies and all those interested in the policing of the sea.

Subjects:
Shipping, Transport and Maritime Law, International Criminal Law
Contents:
Introduction: Bringing together Maritime Crime & Policing Scholars and Professionals
Yarin Eski and Martin Wright
1.Seas of thieves. Who are the pirates and what drive them?
Lydelle Joubert
2.Through the Sea, via the Port and into the City: illicit trafficking on the waterfront
Anna Sergi
3.Illegal maritime migration on the Western-Mediterranean route, a great challenge for Europe
Marta Fernández Sebastián
4.The Transnational Nature of Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated (IUU) Fishing: Examining Global Strategies, Punishment and Solutions
Osatohanmwen Anastasia Eruaga and Irekpitan Okukpon
5.Maritime Crime in the Western Indian Ocean: Interlinkages and Dynamics
Katja Lindskov Jacobsen and Linnea Kjølstad Larsen
6.Hybrid Policing of Maritime Irregular Threats? Combatting terrorism, piracy, and transnational crimes at the littoral sea
Arabinda Acharya
7.From Excessive to Illegal Land Reclamation: A Case Study in China
Edward Sing Yue Chan
8.An overview of INTERPOL´s involvement in tackling Maritime Piracy: history, developments, and legal issues
Giulio Calcara and Mika Launiala
9.The Incorporation of Private Security Actors to Protect Dutch Merchant Vessels: A Bourdieuian Reflection
Koko Christiaanse and Yarin Eski
10.Security Community-Building in the Mediterranean Sea: The European Union’s Strategy in Combating Irregular Migration
Shazwanis Shukri
11.Security networks in ports: what’s in a name?
Eva Dinchel and Marleen Easton
12.Public-private cooperation in the approach to drug crime in the port of Rotterdam. The case of the Information Sharing Center Port Safety and Security
Lieselot Bisschop, Richard Staring, Robby Roks and Gwynneth Goudsblom
13.Governing ‘undermining’ vs. policing drug-related organized crime in the Port of Amsterdam and North Sea Canal area. An Empirical Study of Port Policing an Ambiguous Concept
Yarin Eski, Mauro Boelens and Danique de Rijk
14.Securing Norwegian Maritime Ports: Navigation in a complex regulatory regime
Martin Nøkleberg
15."Kid, This Ain’t Your Night": Organized Crime and Discrimination at the Port of New York and New Jersey Paul E. Babchik and Jeffrey Walden
Conclusion: Make up Leeway. Future maritime criminology and policing studies Yarin Eski and Martin Wright