000 01190cam a2200157 4500
100 1 _aKRCMARIC Daniel
245 _aNowhere to hide?
_bglobal policing and the politics of extradition/
_cDaniel Krcmaric
260 _c2022
520 _aGlobal policing efforts go far beyond combatting terrorism. The United States has tracked down war criminals in the former Yugoslavia, prosecuted Mexican drug kingpins in U.S. courts, transferred a Congolese warlord to the International Criminal Court, and even invaded foreign countries to apprehend wanted suspects. Likewise, Chinese police and intelligence forces crisscross the globe engaging in surveillance, abductions, and forced repatriations. But global policing activities are hard to study because they tend to occur "in the shadows." Extradition treaties-agreements that facilitate the formal surrender of wanted fugitives from one country to another-represent a unique part of the global policing architecture that is directly observable.
650 _aMILITARY
650 _aPOLICY
650 _aEXTRADITION
773 _aInternational Security :
_gVol 47, No 2, Fall 2022, pp.7-47 (68)
598 _aMILITARY
945 _i68992.1001
_rY
_sY
999 _c42085
_d42085