Controlling State Crime

Front Cover
Jeffrey Ian Ross
Transaction Publishers, 2000 M01 1 - 431 pages

Academic research on state crime has focused on the illegal actions of individuals and organizations (i.e., syndicates and corporations). Interchangeably labeled governmental crime, delinquency, illegality, or lawlessness, official deviance and misconduct, crimes of obedience, and human rights violations, state crime has largely been considered in relation to insurgent violence or threats to national security. Generally, it has been seen as a phenomenon endemic to authoritarian countries in transitional and lesser developed contexts. We need look no further than today's headlines to see the evidence of state crime. Rwanda, where government troops massacred countless Hutus and Tutsis, governmental atrocities in Kosovo, at the hands of the Yugoslavian Army, and East Timor where both individuals and property have been decimated, largely perpetrated by the Indonesian military.

The study of how to control state crime has been difficult. There are definitional, conceptual, theoretical, and methodological problems, as well as difficulties in designing of practical methods to abolish, combat, control or resist this type of behavior. Jeffrey Ian Ross reviews these shortcomings, then develops a preliminary model of ways to control state crime. His intention is stimulating scholarly research and debate, but also encouraging progressive-minded policymakers and practitioners who work for governmental and nongovernmental organizations. The hope is that they will reflect upon the methods they advocate or use to minimize state transgressions. This new edition will be of compelling interest to students of political science and criminology, as well as general readers interested in human rights, state crime, and world affairs.

 

Contents

International StateSponsored Organizations to Control
25
A State Action May Be Nasty But Is Not Likely to Be
35
Making Sense
53
Controlling State Crimes by National Security Agencies
81
Controlling Crimes by the Military
115
State Crime by the Police and Its Control
141
Control and Prevention of Crimes Committed by State
163
Crimes of the Capitalist State Against Labor
207
Preventing State Crimes Against the Environment
235
Rights
283
Can States Commit Crimes? The Limits of Formal
349
Eliminating State Crime by Abolishing the State
389
Where Do We
419
Contributors
427
Copyright

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