Home
| Databases
| WorldLII
| Search
| Feedback
Queensland University of Technology Law and Justice Journal |
BOOK
REVIEW
ANNE MATTHEW
[*]
Robert J Kelly, Jess Maghan and
Joseph D Serio,
Illicit Trafficking: A
Reference Handbook
(ABC CLIO, 2005)
260 pp
The rise of globalisation and associated economic
interdependence are high on the agendas of international organisations, national
legislators and law enforcement organisations
worldwide.[1] Among the most
significant concerns is the capacity for a concurrent expansion of opportunities
for crime.[2] Containment is a
central issue.[3] The speed at which
industry and business have moved to globalised platforms is largely attributed
to innovations in science, engineering,
industrial production techniques and
communication technologies, which are typically internet enabled. Since the
early 1980s these
factors have played a significant role in the adoption of
business models premised upon the international amalgamation of industry
and
business practices along with foreign investment.
Naturally,
globalisation has also generated a wealth of literature and academic research.
Conventional approaches to this subject
area have focused on the application of
globalisation to established legal and economic paradigms with significant
research devoted
to the impact of globalisation on matters such as foreign
exchange, intellectual property rights, crime, mobility of capital resources
and
knowledge in a conventional sense.[4]
In Illicit Trafficking: A Reference Handbook, Kelly, Maghan and Serio
juxtapose this approach with an analysis of the impact of globalism on
non-conventional economic and legal
paradigms, in particular, those associated
with ‘illicit’ global movements of goods and services. Illicit
Trafficking: A Reference Handbook considers these contemporary issues in the
context of global smuggling operations.
Consistent with other works in
the Contemporary World Issues series, this book is intended as an introductory
reference point to the
subject featuring an historical overview and an excursus
on current problems and issues. The brief history of trafficking in Chapter
1
focuses upon explaining the rise of trafficking organisations, the nature of
current illicit trafficking, current issues and approaches
to containment.
Global illicit trafficking exists in a vast array of illegal markets. Earlier
research has considered its extension
into, for example, the smuggling of
adults,[5]
children,[6] human organs,
drugs,[7]
weapons,[8] components of weapons of
mass destruction (particularly nuclear
materials),[9] intellectual
property,[10] stolen artifacts of
cultural significance (such as antiquities, art and items of national or
indigenous import),[11]
terrorism[12] and money
laundering.[13] Chapter 2 examines
current issues in these illegal markets. Another chapter is comprised entirely
of a chronology of significant
events in this area.
Illicit
Trafficking: A Reference Handbook includes short bibliographical sketches of
seventeen key figures relevant to the chronological analysis, including (among
others),
Osama bin Laden, Manuel Noriega, Monzar Al Kassar, Al Capone, Pablo
Escobar (aka ‘The Godfather’), and Sa Khun (aka ‘The
Prince of
Death’). Aside from a short chapter summarising the authors’
conclusions, the balance of the book devotes
91 pages to statistical references,
lists of international agencies and organisations, and other resources for
researchers or students
of the area. This particular aspect of the book is very
carefully organised and appears easy to use.
Although legal theorists
expecting this book to present a seminal work on the area may be disappointed,
it nevertheless represents
a contribution to the subject area which is likely to
be welcomed by students, educators and practitioners. Indeed, the breadth
of
topics canvassed within the work is compelling and represents a rich tapestry,
if not a comprehensive cataloguing of illicit trafficking
in its various forms
and manifestations. As a contribution to the subject matter, it is important to
remember that the book is designed
to be viewed as a launching pad into the
subject area rather than a decisive work or indeed an attempt to challenge
existing paradigms
based on prevailing theories. The book is part of a series
designed primarily to provide an overview and resource to various contemporary
subjects. Books in this series are intended to provide a ‘good starting
point for research by high school and college students,
scholars and general
readers as well as by legislators, business people, activists and
others’.[14] The series is
typically written by ‘professional writers, scholars and nonacademic
experts’.[15] Indeed, the
authors of Illicit Trafficking: A Reference Handbook hail from academic
and international business intelligence backgrounds specialising in criminology,
terrorism, crime control and social
distress.[16]
Illicit
Trafficking: A Reference Handbook is available as an eBook at
www.abc-clio.com. In order to access the eBook version, readers must subscribe
to the entire abc-clio
library, although 30 day free preview trials are
available upon registration. The advantages of this eBook format are online
accessibility,
bookmarking with your own notes, and the added functionality of
search tools. However, it is disappointing that the eBook simply
reproduces the
printed format of the book. An online format typically presents an opportunity
for keeping a resource book of this
nature updated, however an online updating
facility does not appear to be available with this eBook offering. While
Illicit Trafficking: A Reference Handbook serves well as an overview and
account of current and emerging issues in this area, its value as a reference
tool that devotes a considerable
proportion of its volume to pointing to current
resources is likely to be limited by the static nature of a printed book.
The legitimacy of a work of this type should not necessarily be
benchmarked against the robust application of accepted legal economic
or
academic paradigms. While seminal works on this subject matter typically
approach this topic from a robust theoretical foundation,
this book remains of
value when accepted for what it purports to offer: an introduction and overview
of the subject area coupled
with lists of currently available useful resources.
It seeks to present a resource-rich volume of information on the subject area
for new scholars of this topic. This book serves as a useful introduction for
students or practitioners who may have an interest
in the topic or who may be
interested in conducting further work in the subject area.
[*] LLB (Qld), LLM (QUT), Solicitor (Qld),
Associate Lecturer, Queensland University of Technology, School of
Law
[1] See further D Joyner,
‘The Proliferation Security Initiative: Nonproliferation,
Counterproliferation, and International Law’
(2005) 30 Yale Journal of
International Law 507; O Greene, ‘Examining International Responses to
Illicit Arms Trafficking’ (2000) 33 Crime Law and Social Change
151; J Sherry, ‘US Legal Mechanisms for the Repatriation of Cultural
Property: Evaluating Strategies for the Successful Recovery
of Claimed National
Patrimony’ (2005) 37 George Washington International Law Review
511; W Cragg, ‘Ethics, Law, Globalization and the Modern Shareholder
Owned Multinational Corporation’ in W Cragg (ed), Ethics Codes,
Corporations and the Challenge of Globalization’ (2005).
[2] See further V Ruggiero,
‘Criminals and Service Providers: Cross-National Dirty Economics’
(1997) 28 Crime Law and Social Change 27; W Chambliss, ‘The
Politics of Crime Statistics’ in C Summer and W Chambliss (eds), The
Blackwell Companion to Criminology (2004); R Baker, Capitalism’s
Achilles Heel: Dirty Money and How to Renew the Free-Market System (John
Wiley & Sons, Hoboken, 2005) 11-23; D Liddick Jnr, The Global Underworld:
Transnational Crime and the United States (Praeger, 2004); Parliamentary
Joint Committee on the Australian Crime Commission, Parliament of Australia,
Cybercrime (2004).
[3] See
further M Cain, ‘Globality, Glocalisation and Private Policing’ in C
Summer and W Chambliss (eds), The Blackwell Companion to Criminology
(2004).
[4] See for
example, P Reichel (ed), Handbook of Transnational Crime & Justice
(Sage Publications, 2004); K Meyer and T Parssinen, Webs of Smoke:
Smugglers, Warlords, Spies and the History of the International Drug Trade
(Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 1998); H Warzazi, Exploitation of
labour Through Illicit and Clandestine Trafficking (United Nations, 1986); C
Roman, H Ahn-Redding and R Simon, Illicit Drug Policies, Trafficking and Use
the World Over (Lexington Books, 2005); J Humphrey, Deviant Behaviour
(Pearson Prentice Hall,
2006).
[5] See further A Aronowitz
and M Peruffo, ‘Trafficking in Human Beings and Related Crimes in West and
Central Africa’ in
C Summer and W Chambliss (eds), The Blackwell
Companion to Criminology
(2004).
[6]
Ibid.
[7] See further for
example, K J Laidler, ‘Globalisation and the Illicit Drugs Trade in Hong
Kong’ in C Summer and W Chambliss
(eds), The Blackwell Companion to
Criminology (2004); Meyer and Parssinen, above n 4; Roman, Ahn-Redding and
Simon, above n 4 and Humphrey, above n 4.
[8] See further Greene, above n
1.
[9] See further for
example, Joyner, above n 1.
[10] See further C Summer and W
Chambliss (eds), The Blackwell Companion to Criminology (Blackwell
Publishing, 2004).
[11] See
further for example, Sherry, above n 1.
[12] See further for example,
Joyner, above n 1.
[13] See
further Summer and Chambliss, above n 10; Baker, above n 2; M Beare,
‘Voluntary Ethical Conduct: Anti-Money Laundering
Compliance and the
Financial Sector’ in W Cragg (ed), Ethics Codes, Corporations and the
Challenge of Globalization’ (2005); A Block and C Weaver, All is
Clouded by Desire: Global Banking, Money Laundering and International Organized
Crime (Praeger, 2004); J Handoll, Capital, Payments and Money Laundering
in the European Union (Richmond Law & Tax, 2006); Commonwealth
Secretariat, Combating Money Laundering and Terrorist Financing: A Model of
Best Practice for the Financial Sector, the Professions and Other
Designated
Businesses (London,
2005).
[14] R Kelly, J Maghan
and J Serio, Illicit Trafficking: A Reference Handbook (ABC-CLIO, 2005),
publisher’s note. See also ABC CLIO
<http:// www.abc.clio.com/visitortools/>
at 22 February 2006.
[15]
Kelly, Maghan and Serio, above n
14.
[16] Ibid 259.
AustLII:
Copyright Policy
|
Disclaimers
|
Privacy Policy
|
Feedback
URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/QUTLawJJl/2006/9.html