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Globalizing Local Policing: An Ethnography of Change and Concern Among Danish Detectives: Transnational Crime, Crime Control and Security

Autor David Sausdal
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 26 mar 2024
The book examines 'the globalization of local policing' through an ethnographic study of the Danish Police. Where many studies are looking into how larger inter- or transnational policing bodies and policies are changing the world of policing, few have gauged how local, public police forces are also globalizing. This book provides some unique insights into this under-researched process. Specifically, it describes the daily practices and perceptions of two Danish detective task forces, tasked with the investigation of organized property crimes committed by foreign nationals. In the book, readers get to see how the detectives think and work, including the many efforts they make in attuning their daily work to a more global reality. More so, readers get to see how the detectives fail and the many frustrations and concerns that such changes include. One the one hand, Danish detectives very much understand the need to de-localize and develop their work. On the other hand, they feel that many of these changes are in conflict with what they find to be real and rewarding police work. For people interested in contemporary issues of policing, the book thus points to a puzzling paradox. Globalization might be making for more mobile and even mobilised local forces, more technologically driven and collaborating with international partners. However, these very processes are also making local officers feel more disarmed than ever. Ultimately, the book describes why that is, its consequences, as well as how to imagine a form of global policing more in tune with its local actors.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9783031189210
ISBN-10: 3031189213
Pagini: 254
Ilustrații: IX, 254 p.
Dimensiuni: 148 x 210 mm
Ediția:2023
Editura: Springer International Publishing
Colecția Palgrave Macmillan
Seria Transnational Crime, Crime Control and Security

Locul publicării:Cham, Switzerland

Cuprins

1. Introduction.- 2. Xenophobia.- 3. Orwellianism.- 4. Terrorism.- 5. Cynicism.- 6. Politics.- 7. Nostalgia.- 8. Conclusion: A policing puzzle.

Notă biografică

David Sausdal is Associate Professor at the Department of Sociology at Lund University, Sweden.

Textul de pe ultima copertă


The book examines 'the globalization of local policing' through an ethnographic study of the Danish Police. Where many studies are looking into how larger inter- or transnational policing bodies and policies are changing the world of policing, few have gauged how local, public police forces are also globalizing. This book provides some unique insights into this under-researched process. Specifically, it describes the daily practices and perceptions of two Danish detective task forces, tasked with the investigation of organized property crimes committed by foreign nationals. In the book, readers get to see how the detectives think and work, including the many efforts they make in attuning their daily work to a more global reality. More so, readers get to see how the detectives fail and the many frustrations and concerns that such changes include. One the one hand, Danish detectives very much understand the need to de-localize and develop their work. On the other hand, they feel that many of these changes are in conflict with what they find to be real and rewarding police work. For people interested in contemporary issues of policing, the book thus points to a puzzling paradox. Globalization might be making for more mobile and even mobilised local forces, more technologically driven and collaborating with international partners. However, these very processes are also making local officers feel more disarmed than ever. Ultimately, the book describes whythat is, its consequences, as well as how to imagine a form of global policing more in tune with its local actors.


David Sausdal is Associate Professor at the Department of Sociology at Lund University, Sweden.


Caracteristici

Provides an ethnographic study of policing in an increasingly global and transnational world Explores police concern, frustration, and apathy towards their changing professional role Looks at possible and potentially better futures for contemporary policing