US mainland, EU archipelago? Convergence and Divergence on Transnational Organized Crime
The fight against organized crime has become a top security priority for the European Union (EU). While a new policy area is emerging, it is difficult to understand who is in lead and how the process develops. This article delves into the post-Lisbon EU security model, exploring how Washington and Brussels collaborate in combating organized crime in a context of changing definitions, actors and policies. It argues that US definitions, operational models and policies influence EU institutional thinking and policies, shifting the emphasis from prevention and rule of law to execution and intelligence. The dynamics of policy convergence and divergence on criminal matters in the transatlantic community reflect tectonic shifts in the deepest levels of thinking security in the West, affecting the moulding of a European security identity.
Russland, folkeretten og militær intervensjon: Selektiv prinsippfasthet
Minda Holm
Minda Holm is a Senior Research Fellow with the research group Global Order and Diplomacy. She holds a PhD in Political Science from the Universit...
view not found
Defence firms facing liberalization: innovation and export in an agent-based model of the defence industry
Iran and the P5+1: Did anyone in the Middle East notice the four month extension?
New article: The Nuclear Agreement with Iran
The newest paper in NUPI’s article series on the Nuclear Agreement with Iran establishes the history of how the parties have ended up where they are today and what is needed to satisfy the conditions of the agreement in the course of the next few months.