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Cops Across Borders: The Internationalization of U.S. Criminal Law Enforcement

Cops Across Borders: The Internationalization of U.S. Criminal Law Enforcement
By Ethan A. Nadelmann

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Product Description

Ethan Nadelmann, who has become widely known as an advocate of drug legalization, proves in this book that he is an important scholar of international law enforcement. By casting his study of law enforcement across the borders, he has broken new criminological ground. Nadelmann's study of the development of the tangled, tight, and problematic relationship between U.S. foreign policy and U.S. law enforcement will enlighten, and even fascinate, students in both areas. -Jerome H. Skolnick, University of California, Berkeley"Like a meteorite Ethan Nadelmann has burst upon the academic scene bringing light, heat, and deep impressions. Cops Across Borders opens up a new field of inquiry and must be read by anyone concerned with U.S. foreign policy and criminal justice." -Gary T. Marx, University of Colorado"Nadelmann's outstanding book illuminates with impressive detail a dimension of security policy about which we know far too little, the international activities of national police forces. This book opens up a new area of research for students of international relations." -Peter Katzenstein, Cornell UniversityCops Across Borders is the first book to examine the policies and issues that lie at the intersection of U.S. foreign policy and U.S. criminal justice. Drawing on interviews with nearly 300 U.S. and foreign law enforcement officials in nineteen countries as well as extensive historical and contemporary materials, Ethan Nadelmann examines how and why U.S. law enforcement officials have extended their efforts beyond American borders, how they have dealt with the challenges confronting them, and why their efforts have proved more or less successful. Nadelmann's analysis traces the evolution of U. S. law enforcement activities abroad since the nation's founding. During the nineteenth century, U.S. customs agents collected information on smuggling operations, naval officers tracked illegal slave trading vessels, slave owners tried to recover fugitive slaves


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #93983 in Books
  • Published on: 1994-02-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 560 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
Nadelmann, who teaches politics and public affairs at Princeton University, has written a thorough history of the way U.S. law enforcement--in areas such as drug trafficking and securities violations--has spread abroad. After surveying the first 150 years of such involvement, he explains how, after WW II, the increased global presence of the U.S. government and the growth of industrial and other non-governmental international activity led to a greater enforcement role. Perhaps most illuminating are the chapters in which, based on interviews, Nadelmann explains how the Drug Enforcement Administration helped modernize European criminal justice systems and how the DEA copes with corruption in Latin America and the Caribbean. He also surveys progress in agreements regarding evidence-gathering and the evolution of rules regarding the capture of fugitives. He concludes that while the impact of the United States' increased capacities in these areas is hard to judge, law enforcers are much better now at capturing individual criminals. An advocate of drug legalization, Nadelmann states in a preface that his research confirmed his skepticism about U.S. drug policies.

Copyright 1994 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

About the Author
Ethan A. Nadelmann is Assistant Professor of Politics and Public Affairs at Princeton University and author of Criminalization and Crime Control in International Society (Oxford, forthcoming).


Customer Reviews

The Truth about Fiction1
Ethan Nadelman is a pro-drug legalization advocate and director of the Drug Policy Alliance. If ever you want to read a biased view of law enforcement from the perspective of the ultra-left wing, then you'll probably like this book. He passes himself off as a drug policy change advocate, a think tank, an unbiased non-aligned opinion. Not hardly. Nadelman views the police as the suspects, and criminals as perpetual victims of the police. He is a genious, and did once go to Princeton. But this book and his other work is pretty far out there.