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Review: Dangerous Offenders — Punishment & Social Order

Review: Dangerous Offenders — Punishment & Social Order REVIEWS tive and efficient simply because the new public management demands it; and the new public management, let us not forget, offers more power to political leaders. Indeed, intelligence ... led policing is emerging very quickly as the next great movement, perhaps already eclipsing community policing. Its borrowing of efficiency (and prevention) rhetoric is, again arguably, more persuasive to political leaders who, after all and in the main, find their political longevity tied more usefully to information than to democracy. Here again, the term globalisation is important: how is democratic citizenry accountability rescued in a context in which the rights of financial investors are to be secured by trans ...national regula ... tory/policing agreements? If, as Martha Huggins has convincingly claimed (Political Policing: The United States and Latin America) a version of export democratisation has successfully used police and intelligence agencies to perpetuate fascism, we have even more need to worry about thinking up the police when we think up democracy. How localism meets globalism, it would appear, is the next challenge of democratic policing and accountability. Willem de Lint Victoria University of Wellington Dangerous Offenders - Punishment & Social Order Ed. by Mark Brown & John Pratt. (2000) http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology SAGE

Review: Dangerous Offenders — Punishment & Social Order

Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology , Volume 34 (1): 2 – Apr 1, 2001

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Publisher
SAGE
Copyright
Copyright © by SAGE Publications
ISSN
0004-8658
eISSN
1837-9273
DOI
10.1177/000486580103400108
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

REVIEWS tive and efficient simply because the new public management demands it; and the new public management, let us not forget, offers more power to political leaders. Indeed, intelligence ... led policing is emerging very quickly as the next great movement, perhaps already eclipsing community policing. Its borrowing of efficiency (and prevention) rhetoric is, again arguably, more persuasive to political leaders who, after all and in the main, find their political longevity tied more usefully to information than to democracy. Here again, the term globalisation is important: how is democratic citizenry accountability rescued in a context in which the rights of financial investors are to be secured by trans ...national regula ... tory/policing agreements? If, as Martha Huggins has convincingly claimed (Political Policing: The United States and Latin America) a version of export democratisation has successfully used police and intelligence agencies to perpetuate fascism, we have even more need to worry about thinking up the police when we think up democracy. How localism meets globalism, it would appear, is the next challenge of democratic policing and accountability. Willem de Lint Victoria University of Wellington Dangerous Offenders - Punishment & Social Order Ed. by Mark Brown & John Pratt. (2000)

Journal

Australian & New Zealand Journal of CriminologySAGE

Published: Apr 1, 2001

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