Conférence

29 mars 2017 - 11h45 à 12h30

Regulation of International Police Cooperation

Pavillon Lionel-Groulx, salle C-2059
Carrefour des arts et des sciences
3150, rue Jean-Brillant

Aucune réservation requise

Dr Saskia Hufnagel is a Senior Lecturer in Criminal Law at Queen Mary University London. She previously worked as a Research Fellow at the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence in Policing and Security (CEPS), Griffith University, Australia, and was a Leverhulme Fellow at the University of Leeds. She taught at the ANU College of Law and held a permanent teaching position at the University of Canberra. She has widely published on international police cooperation, comparative constitutional law, terrorism and art crime. Her publications include Policing Cooperation Across Borders: Comparative Perspectives on Law Enforcement within the EU and Australia Ashgate, 2013. Dr Hufnagel is a qualified German legal professional and accredited specialist in criminal law.

 

Summary

A considerable amount of research has examined European Union (EU) and United States (US) cross-border law enforcement, while police cooperation in other regions of the world has rarely been investigated. This presentation outlines both EU and US cooperation regulation and practice, but puts them into context by comparing other regions, such as Greater China and Australasia. Police cooperation can be based on legally binding treaties and agreements, but is just as often unrecorded, informal police-to-police practice only. By assessing US, EU, Greater China, and Australasian law enforcement mechanisms in more depth, different forms of cooperation and levels of formalisation can be distinguished. It can be observed that cooperation depends heavily on the political systems and the historical development of policing and security mechanisms in each region. While it could be assumed that the highest level of formalisation can be found at the international level, this study has found the highest level of formalisation in all systems addressed in the EU. The presentation aims at explaining this development and pointing out some general principles that might apply to police cooperation strategies in different regional scenarios across the globe.

 

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