301271 Transnational Organized Crime: Security Label or Critical Analytical Category? (S) (SoSe 2024)

Contents, comment

Experts, the media, popular culture, and specific experiences from the Global North have always dominated the debate on transnational organized crime. At the beginning of the 20th century, the first signs of organized crime in the USA were associated with criminal activities of foreign, ethnically homogeneous groups. This "alien conspiracy" theory evolved into the "mafia" and later into "illegal enterprises". These definitions focus on the supply side of illegal products and services. With the declaration of the "War on Drugs", the drug trafficking organizations of Colombia and later Mexico became synonymous with organized crime under the constructed term "cartel". Above all, the framework of international organizations combined the dynamics of globalization with international terrorism to create the concept of "transnational organized crime" (TOC). The securitization paradigm contributes to viewing TOC as a national security issue. Critical analysis of the diverse threats and diversified activities of TOC is increasingly narrowing down to definitions that correspond to such a paradigm. In this interdisciplinary social science seminar, we highlight contradictions of knowledge production and correlate the concept of TOC with related topics like migration, global justice, and decoloniality with a regional focus on the Americas.

Requirements for participation, required level

Willingness to read and debate English texts.

Bibliography

  • Albanese, J & Reichel, P (2014). Transnational Organized Crime: An Overview from Six Continents. SAGE: Los Angeles
  • Aliverti A, Carvalho H, Chamberlen A, et al. (eds) (2022). Decolonizing the Criminal Question: Rethinking the Legacies, Epistemologies and Geographies of Criminal Justice. Oxford
  • Block, A (1983). East side-west side: organizing crime in New York, 1930-1950. New Brunswick
  • Kaltmeier, O, et al. (Eds.) (2020). The Routledge Handbook of the Political Economy and Governance in the Americas. Milton Park
  • Mignolo, W. and Walsh, C. (2018). On decoloniality: Concepts, analytics praxis. Durham
  • Von Lampe, K. (2016). Organized crime: analyzing illegal activities, criminal structures, and extra-legal governance. Los Angeles
  • Zavala, O (2022). Drug Cartels Do Not Exist. Narcotrafficking in US and Mexican Culture. La Vergne.

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Subject assignments

Module Course Requirements  
29-WS-GSG Globale Ordnungen und Governance Forschungsseminar Study requirement
Graded examination
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30-M-IAS12 Politics of Global Citizenship / Políticas de ciudadanía global Seminar "theoretisch" Study requirement
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- Graded examination Student information
30-M-Soz-M5a Politische Soziologie a Seminar 1 Study requirement
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Seminar 2 Study requirement
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- Graded examination Student information
30-M-Soz-M5b Politische Soziologie b Seminar 1 Study requirement
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Seminar 2 Study requirement
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- Graded examination Student information
30-M-Soz-M5c Politische Soziologie c Seminar 1 Study requirement
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Seminar 2 Study requirement
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- Graded examination Student information

The binding module descriptions contain further information, including specifications on the "types of assignments" students need to complete. In cases where a module description mentions more than one kind of assignment, the respective member of the teaching staff will decide which task(s) they assign the students.


Studienleistung: Presentation/Essay.
Prüfungsleistung: Term Paper.

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Last update basic details/teaching staff:
Tuesday, January 9, 2024 
Last update times:
Friday, February 2, 2024 
Last update rooms:
Friday, February 2, 2024 
Type(s) / SWS (hours per week per semester)
S / 2
Language
This lecture is taught in english
Department
Faculty of Sociology
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