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May 17, 2005
New Article Spotlight: Patrick Keenan of Illinois
CrimProf Patrick Keenan of Illinois has posted The New Deterrence: Crime and Policy in the Age of Globalization on SSRN. The article is forthcoming in the Iowa Law Review. Here's the abstract:
Crime has historically been a local
phenomenon. Most murder victims know their killers; most victims of
child abuse know their abusers; victims of theft often need not look
beyond their own neighborhoods for the thieves. Crime is regulated
locally. In the United States, it is the states, not the federal
government, that prosecute the vast majority of criminal cases.
Globalization is changing this in ways that have yet to be fully
explored. Although crime as an event will always have a substantial
local component because it is typically responded to by officials and
victims in the place it occurs, it is becoming much more of a
transnational phenomenon. It is increasingly common for activity that
is regulated in one country because it is dangerous or unwanted to
become more common in other countries where the activity is equally (or
almost equally) unwanted but much less effectively regulated. What
happens when activity that is unwanted in two places is more
effectively regulated in one place than in the other? Does the unwanted
activity migrate from the first state to the second? How much of it
migrates, and what factors influence the amount of displacement? How
should we conceive of regulation in these circumstances -- as a local
response to a local problem or as part of a broader effort to reduce
the overall incidence of the unwanted activity? These questions are
fundamental to determining what globalization will mean in the new
century, but so far have not been fully explored. The existing
scholarship on deterrence will be of limited use in a globalized
context.
This
article is the first attempt to fill the gap by developing a richer
approach to deterrence for a globalized world. I draw insights from
both law-and-economics and criminology literature to enrich our
understanding of deterrence. To ground my theoretical discussion in a
real-world problem, throughout the article I use sex tourism as an
example of the kind of unwanted activity that now crosses borders and
has complicated our understanding of deterrence. I focus on two issues
central to deterrence in a globalized world that have not gotten
sufficient scholarly attention: the phenomenon of displacement and the
role of status. I add three important considerations. First, I argue
that informal sanctions, as opposed to formal, legal sanctions, are
increasingly important and must be part of any effective deterrence
policy. Second, I argue that substitution - when activity migrates from
one location to another because of changes in enforcement policy in the
first place - is a complicated process that can be manipulated to
enhance deterrence. Finally, I argue that when unwanted behavior
involves people from different countries, we must consider the role of
status in deterrence. Differences in status can distort the social
processes of judgment and disapproval that allow communities to control
unwanted behavior without recourse to law. These are vitally important
issues. Because globalized crime is so widely dispersed, it will be
almost impossible for the local communities affected to get together
and develop a coordinated plan. If we are to prevent law enforcement
successes in the West from turning into social disasters for those in
the developing world, we must bring theory into step with the ways that
globalization has changed the reality of crime.
To obtain the paper, click here. [Mark Godsey]
May 17, 2005 in Scholarship | Permalink
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