Crime and Globalisation Flashcards
Crime and globalisation
How does globalisation increase opportunity for crime?
- as world becomes more interconnected, the opportunities for cross-border crime increase (fraud, drug dealing, poaching etc.)
Crime and globalisation
What crimes, in particular, does globalisation increase our awareness of?
- risks posed by the harms we do to the global environment, like global warming
- human rights abuses
Crime and globalisation
As globalisation has provided opportunities for legitimate business activities, it has also brought about growth in transnational organised crime. What is one offence that has increased?
- cyber-crime
The global criminal economy
How much does Castells estimate that the global criminal economy is worth?
- £1 trillion per year
List some examples of global crime?
- arms trafficking
- trafficking in nuclear materials
- smuggling of illegal immigrants
- trafficking in women and children (ie. prostitution and slavery) (estimated half a million people are trafficked to Western Europe each year)
- sex tourism
- trafficking in body parts for organ transplants
- cyber-crime like identity theft and child pornography
- green crimes
- international terrorism based on ideological links
- smuggling of legal goods to evade taxes/ stolen goods
- trafficking in cultural artefacts/ art
- trafficking in endangered species and their body parts
- money laundering
The global criminal economy
The global criminal economy has both a demand side and a supply side. What is one reason for the scale of transnational organised crime? What does the supply side provide?
- demand for its products and services in the rich West
- drugs, prostitution
- provides a supply of drugs, sex workers and other goods and services demanded in the West - mostly from developing world (easily bribed, police aren’t well funded to deal with crime)
The global criminal economy
How does supply link to the globalisation process?
- most drugs are grown in the developing world (Afghanistan - heroin) - large populations of impoverished peasants
- for the peasants, drug cultivation is an attractive option requiring little investment in technology and commands higher prices than traditional crops
- eg. in Colombia, 20% of the population depend on cocaine production for their livelihoods (they then defend the producers so they can’t get caught)
Global risk consciousness
What is an example of how globalisation creates new insecurities and a new mentality of risk consciousness in which risk is seen as global?
- increased movement of people as economic migrants seeking work/ asylum seekers fleeing persecution
Global risk consciousness
How does the media exaggerate the risks we face?
- in the case of immigration, they create moral panics and supposed ‘threats’ often fuelled by politicians (eg. Nigel Farage)
Global risk consciousness
What is an effect of the media’s negative coverage of immigration?
- led to hate crimes
Global risk consciousness
One result of global risk consciousness is the intensification of social control at the national level. How is this done (4)?
- UK has tightened its border control regulations
- UK has no legal limit regarding the period of time in which a person can be held in immigration detention
- other European states have brought in fences, CCTV, thermal imaging to prevent crossing
- increased attempts at international cooperation and control of various crimes (esp. since 9/11)
Globalisation, capitalism and crime
Taylor argued that globalisation has led to changes in the pattern and extent of crime. How has globalisation created greater inequality and rising crime?
- giving free rein to market forces
- supply and demand are both high
- polarised the rich and the poor into Western world (demand, consumers) and places such as Africa (supply drugs etc.)
Globalisation, capitalism and crime
What factors have meant that crime has increased among the poorest people?
- transnational corporations have switched manufacturing to low wage countries, producing job insecurity, unemployment and poverty
- deregulation means government have little control over their own economies, to create jobs or raise taxes, while spending on welfare has declined
- marketisation has encouraged people to see themselves as individual consumers (calculating personal costs and benefits of each action, undermining social cohesion)
- left realists show increasing materialism promoted by global media portrays success in terms of consumption
Globalisation, capitalism and crime
All of the crime increasing factors have contributed to increased crime among the poor. How has the lack of legitimate job opportunities contributed to this?
- destroys self-respect
- drives unemployed to look for illegitimate jobs eg. drug dealing
- in LA, deindustrialisation has led to growth in drugs gangs
Globalisation, capitalism and crime
How has globalisation led to greater criminal opportunities on a grand scale for elite groups?
- deregulation of financial markets have created opportunities for insider trading and transferring money to avoid taxes
- creation of transnational bodies had offered opportunities for fraudulent claims for subsidies (ie. groups promising to do work and then not carrying it through after being paid)