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DTSTAMP:20260413T101529
DTSTART:20160202T114500
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DTEND:20160202T123000
URL:https://murmitoyen.com/events/vanille/udem/detail/674400
LOCATION:Université de Montréal - Carrefour des arts et des sciences\, 31
 50\, rue Jean-Brillant \, Montréal\, QC\, Canada\, H3T 1N8
SUMMARY: Noble Cause at the Border? Unravelling crimmigration control in EU
  border areas - ANNULÉ
DESCRIPTION:Guest speaker : Maartje van der Woude \nMaartje van der Woude
  is Full Professor of Socio-Legal Studies at the Van Vollenhoven Institute
  for Law\, Governance\, and Development (VVI) and Associate Professor of C
 riminal Law at the Institute for Criminal Law & Criminology. Her research 
 interests include discretionary decision-making\, the politicization of cr
 ime & migration\, the merger of crime control & migration control\, polici
 ng and procedural justice. After previous visiting affiliations at the Cen
 tre for the Study of Law & Society at UC Berkeley and UC Hastings College 
 of the Law\, Maartje is currently a visiting professor at the Department o
 f Government and Politics of the University of Maryland.\nSummary\nEver 
 since the implementation of the Schengen agreement in 1985\, driven by con
 cerns about mass migration and transnational crime\, Member states have so
 ught ways to monitor internal migration mobility without breaching the Sch
 engen Border Code. In the Netherlands the vital role of monitoring the int
 ernal border areas is fulfilled by the Military and Border Police (MBP). T
 heir official task is to prevent irregular migration\, yet\, as a result o
 f increased concerns over the EU’s external borders and the global war o
 n terror\, this official focus of immigration control seems to have been e
 xtended to unofficially also include crime control.\nWhereas this develop
 ment of 'crimmigration control' in border areas can partially be explained
  by developments on the EU and national policy level\, it is also necessar
 y to look at the role of human agency and the often highly discretionary d
 ecisions made by individual border patrol officers. To what extent do thei
 r actions (further) fuel this process of crimmigration control? Can their 
 behaviour be explained by what in the literature on police ethics has been
  coined as 'noble cause' decision-making - decision-making that favours ut
 ilitarian ends in law enforcement activity - or are there other less noble
  underlying rationales?\nInformation\nConférence présentée par le Cen
 tre international de criminologie comparée
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