Reading about crime in post-intervention societies: a critical assessment
Author(s)
Janssens, JelleRE23002001189317802000115325Cools, MarceditorRE23801001322691
De Kimpe, SofieeditorRE08801001356845054396515115001993423455
De Ruyver, BriceeditorRE23801000407659
Easton, MarleeneditorEB10802000187467
Pauwels, LieveneditorRE23001993016156801001484965
Ponsaers, PauleditorRE23801000944290
Vande Walle, GudruneditorUGent801001149913978399156440
Vander Beken, TomeditorRE23801000906201
Vander Laenen, FreyaeditorRE23001993335953801001127883
Vermeulen, GerteditorRE23801000853051
Keywords
Social SciencesCrime control
Police reform
Crime prevention
Statebuilding
Good governance
Post-conflict societies
Peacebuilding
Internal security
Rule of law
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http://biblio.ugent.be/publication/547599/file/6816594Abstract
Contemporary conflicts often arise from distrust among certain ethnic, religious or militant groups who no longer believe that the local government and its legal system are able to guarantee and defend their individual and collective rights, their cultural identity and their personal or collective safety. Discrimination, corruption and abuse of power by law enforcement officials or the military, fuel and exacerbate conflicts. Since it is commonly accepted that safeguarding domestic security is a crucial precondition for achieving sustainable peace and the best guarantee against the pernicious consequences of conflicts such as enduring instability, streams of refugees and the prevalence of organized crime, interventions in the post-Cold War era have increasingly put the spotlight on the internal security situation of war-torn societies. Because criminal violence and lawlessness have a disrupting impact on post-intervention societies as a whole, the prevention and control of crime is a vital aspect of procuring that security. This contribution provides an overview of our current understanding of crime in post-intervention societies and the typical reaction to it (exporting the community-based police model) through a literature study. The objective of this paper is to highlight where the existing literature falls short, where more research is needed, how and why. It also critically addresses the basic principles of international (military) interventions, the basic doctrines behind them and assumptions concerning the nature, levels and prevention of crime in post-intervention societies.Contemporary conflicts often arise from distrust among certain ethnic, religious or militant groups who no longer believe that the local government and its legal system are able to guarantee and defend their individual and collective rights, their cultural identity and their personal or collective safety. Discrimination, corruption and abuse of power by law enforcement officials or the military, fuel and exacerbate conflicts. Since it is commonly accepted that safeguarding domestic security is a crucial precondition for achieving sustainable peace and the best guarantee against the pernicious consequences of conflicts such as enduring instability, streams of refugees and the prevalence of organized crime, interventions in the post-Cold War era have increasingly put the spotlight on the internal security situation of war-torn societies. Because criminal violence and lawlessness have a disrupting impact on post-intervention societies as a whole, the prevention and control of crime is a vital aspect of procuring that security. This contribution provides an overview of our current understanding of crime in post-intervention societies and the typical reaction to it (exporting the community-based police model) through a literature study. The objective of this paper is to highlight where the existing literature falls short, where more research is needed, how and why. It also critically addresses the basic principles of international (military) interventions, the basic doctrines behind them and assumptions concerning the nature, levels and prevention of crime in post-intervention societies.
B2
Date
2009Type
textIdentifier
oai:search.ugent.be:pug01:547599http://biblio.ugent.be/publication/547599/file/6816594
URN:ISBN:9789046602416