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Questões de Segurança II

Código: C300     Acronym: QSEG I

Áreas Científicas
Classificação Área Científica
OFICIAL Criminologia

Ocorrência: 2009/2010 - 1S

Ativa? Sim
Curso/CE Responsável: Criminologia

Ciclos de Estudo/Cursos

Acronym No. of students Plano de Estudos Anos Curriculares Credits UCN Credits ECTS Horas de Contacto Horas Totais
C 24 Plano Oficial LCRI 3 - 6 -

Língua de trabalho

Inglês

Objectives

- To recognise how forces of globalization must be incorporated into criminological theory and practice;
- To understand the formative processes of global prohibition regimes examining case-studies in international criminalization;
- To develop critical analysis regarding global insecurity discourse and how this shapes the transnational crime control agenda;
- To appreciate the complex interaction between the ‘global’ and the ‘local’ as regards crime and crime control;
- To comprehend the relationship between security and global mobility;
- To develop an appreciation of trends towards policy-transfer and commodification within the transnational policing community;
- To demonstrate theoretical engagement with a cross-disciplinary literature on global crime and crime control;
- To critically evaluate current trends within transnational policing and develop awareness of their implications for human rights and security inequalities.

Programa

1. Globalization and Criminology: An Introduction
2. Global Prohibition Regimes I
3. Global Prohibition Regimes II
4. Global Law Enforcement as a Protection Racket
5. Global Mobility Regimes I - Containment
6. Global Mobility Regimes II - Facilitation
7. Criminology and ‘The Tourist Gaze’
8. Global Cities and the ‘Planet of Slums’
9. Policing Global Risks
10. Policing Transnational Protest
11. The Global Travel of Crime Policies
12. Globalization and the State
13. Towards a Global Criminology?

Métodos de ensino e atividades de aprendizagem

Theoretical sessions are used to describe and discuss the main contents of the program. Practice sessions are orientated toward the analysis and discussion of scientific literature and other resources previously prepared by the students.

Tipo de avaliação

Avaliação distribuída com exame final

Observações

Aas, KF (2007) ‘Analysing a World in Motion: Global Flows Meet ‘Criminology of the Other’’, Theoretical Criminology, 11(2): 283-303.

Aas, KF (2008) Globalization and Crime, Sage: London.

Agra, C (2009) ‘Requiem Pour La Guerre à La Drogue : L’Expérimentation Portugaise de Décriminalisation’ Déviance et Société, 33(1): 27-49.

Andreas, P & Nadelmann, E (2006) Policing the Globe: Criminalization and Crime Control in International Relations, Oxford University Press: Oxford.

Bauman, Z (1998) Globalization: The Human Consequences. Cambridge, UK: Polity Press.

Bianchi, R (2006) ‘Tourism and the Globalization of Fear: Analysing the Politics of Risk and the (In)security of Global Travel’, Tourism and Hospitality Research, 7(1): 64-75.

Della Porta, D, Peterson, A & Reiter, H (2006) The Policing of Transnational Protest, Aldershot, Ashgate.

Ellison, G & O’Reilly, C (2008) ‘Ulster’s Policing Goes Global: The Police Reforms Process in Northern Ireland and the Creation of a Global Brand’, Crime, Law and Social Change, 50(4-5): 331-351.

Franklin, A (2003) ‘The Tourist Syndrome: An Interview with Zygmunt Bauman’, Tourist Studies, 3(2): 205–17.

Goldsmith, A & Sheptycki, JWE (2007) Crafting Transnational Policing: Police Capacity Building and Global Police Reform, Hart Publishing: Oxford.

Johnston, L (2000) ‘Transnational Private Policing: The Impact of Global Commercial Security’, in JWE Sheptycki (ed.) Issues in Transnational Policing, pp. 21-42. Routledge, London.

Klein, N (2007a) The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism, Allen Lane, London.

Klein, N (2007b) ‘Rapture Rescue 911: Disaster Response for the Chosen’ The Nation, November 1st 2007.

Loader, I & Sparks, R (2002) ‘Contemporary Landscapes of Crime, Order and Control: Governance, Risk and Globalization’ in Maguire, M, Morgan, R & Reiner, R (eds) The Oxford Handbook of Criminology, 3rd Edition, pp. 83-111. Oxford University Press, Oxford.

Mythen, G & Walklate, S (2006) ‘Communicating the Terrorist Risk: Harnessing a Culture of Fear’ British Journal of Criminology, 46(3): 379-398.

O’Reilly, C (2010) ‘The Transnational Security Consultancy Industry: A Case of State-Corporate Symbiosis’, Theoretical Criminology, 14(2)

Scherrer, A (2009) The G8 Against Transnational Organised Crime, Ashgate: Aldershot.

Shamir, R (2005) ‘Without Borders? Notes on Globalization as a Mobility Regime’, Sociological Theory, 23(2): 197-217.

Sheptycki, JWE (1997) ‘Insecurity, Risk Suppression and Segregation: Some Reflections on Policing in the Transnational Age’, Theoretical Criminology, 1(3): 303-315.

Sheptycki, JWE (2000) Issues in Transnational Policing, Routledge: London.

Wacquant, L (2001) ‘Deadly Symbiosis: When Ghetto and Prison Meet and Mesh’, Punishment and Society, 3(1): 95-134.

Weber, L & Bowling, B, (2008) ‘Valiant Beggars and Global Vagabonds: Select, Eject and Immobilize’, Theoretical Criminology, 12(3): 355-375.

Whyte, D (2007) ‘The Crimes of Neo-Liberal Rule in Occupied Iraq’, British Journal of Criminology, 47(2): 177-195.

Zedner, L (2009) Security, Routledge, Key Ideas in Criminology Series.
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