
Panopticon – Tijdschrift voor strafrecht, criminologie en forensisch welzijnswerk – 2016 – nr. 4
Inhoudsopgave
Editoriaal
Editoriaal
Artikelen
Rubriekteksten
Opsporing en politie – Police and Investigation
- Recente overheidsmaatregelen i.v.m. de ‘foreign fighters’
Rechtshulp en advocatuur – Legal Aid and Representation
- Welke toekomst voor de gecommunautariseerde juridische eerstelijnsbijstand? Verslag van een rondetafelgesprek op 26 februari 2016
- Een nieuw stelsel van gefinancierde rechtsbijstand in Nederland?
- Family Justice Centers: de aanpak van intrafamiliaal geweld herinrichten vanuit het perspectief van de cliënt
- Transitiehuizen … Naar een vorm van justitie die meer humaan en efficiënt is?

Panopticon – Tijdschrift voor strafrecht, criminologie en forensisch welzijnswerk – 2016 – nr. 4
Inhoudsopgave
Editoriaal
Editoriaal
Artikelen
Rubriekteksten
Opsporing en politie – Police and Investigation
- Recente overheidsmaatregelen i.v.m. de ‘foreign fighters’
Rechtshulp en advocatuur – Legal Aid and Representation
- Welke toekomst voor de gecommunautariseerde juridische eerstelijnsbijstand? Verslag van een rondetafelgesprek op 26 februari 2016
- Een nieuw stelsel van gefinancierde rechtsbijstand in Nederland?
- Family Justice Centers: de aanpak van intrafamiliaal geweld herinrichten vanuit het perspectief van de cliënt
- Transitiehuizen … Naar een vorm van justitie die meer humaan en efficiënt is?

Panopticon – Tijdschrift voor strafrecht, criminologie en forensisch welzijnswerk – 2016 – nr. 3
Inhoudsopgave
Editoriaal
Editoriaal
Artikelen
Rubriekteksten
Crisis(preventie)plannen bij mensen met een psychische kwetsbaarheid:het cliëntperspectief centraal
Een terugblik op het Karadžic proces
Community Based Participatory Research in de studie van druggebruik bijetnische minderheden
Visuele criminologie in actie? Methodologische keuzes bij het maken vande etnografische film ‘Biso, de zwarte stadsbendes van Brussel’
Boekbesprekingen

Panopticon – Tijdschrift voor strafrecht, criminologie en forensisch welzijnswerk – 2016 – nr. 3
Inhoudsopgave
Editoriaal
Editoriaal
Artikelen
Rubriekteksten
Crisis(preventie)plannen bij mensen met een psychische kwetsbaarheid:het cliëntperspectief centraal
Een terugblik op het Karadžic proces
Community Based Participatory Research in de studie van druggebruik bijetnische minderheden
Visuele criminologie in actie? Methodologische keuzes bij het maken vande etnografische film ‘Biso, de zwarte stadsbendes van Brussel’
Boekbesprekingen

Panopticon – Tijdschrift voor strafrecht, criminologie en forensisch welzijnswerk – 2016 – nr. 2
Inhoudsopgave
Editoriaal
Editoriaal
Artikelen
Humane detentie en sociale rechten. Een thematische verkenning binnenen overheen de muren
Rubriekteksten
Verhoren van mensen met psychische stoornissen
Boekbesprekingen

Panopticon – Tijdschrift voor strafrecht, criminologie en forensisch welzijnswerk – 2016 – nr. 2
Inhoudsopgave
Editoriaal
Editoriaal
Artikelen
Humane detentie en sociale rechten. Een thematische verkenning binnenen overheen de muren
Rubriekteksten
Verhoren van mensen met psychische stoornissen
Boekbesprekingen

Panopticon – Tijdschrift voor strafrecht, criminologie en forensisch welzijnswerk – 2016 – nr. 1
Inhoudsopgave
Editoriaal
Editoriaal
Artikelen
Rubriekteksten
Boekbesprekingen

Panopticon – Tijdschrift voor strafrecht, criminologie en forensisch welzijnswerk – 2016 – nr. 1
Inhoudsopgave
Editoriaal
Editoriaal
Artikelen
Rubriekteksten
Boekbesprekingen

Abonnement Panopticon – Tijdschrift voor strafrecht, criminologie en forensisch welzijnswerk – 2016 Student
Panopticon werd in 1980 opgericht als "Tijdschrift voor Strafrecht, Criminologie en Forensisch welzijnswerk". Het feit dat er meerdere disciplines behandeld worden, wijst meteen op de kerndoelstelling van het tijdschrift. Het creëert een forum waarin alle informatie over wat er zich in en rond de strafrechtsbedeling, de criminologie en het forensisch welzijnswerk afspeelt, systematisch en deskundig aan bod komt.Informatie en ideeën van het ene strafrechtelijk actieveld stromen door naar het andere, waar men vroeger in het beste geval een gebrekkig zicht op alle relevante deelfacetten had, en bijgevolg het totaalbeeld uit het oog verloor.
Jaargang 37
Jaargang 36
Abonnement
- Individueel: € 99,95 (bestel nu)
– Studenten: € 49,50 (bestel nu)
<!-- - Opbergband: € 25,- (bestel nu)
-->
Prijzen zijn inclusief btw en verzendkosten.
Meer informatie over Panopticon

Abonnement Panopticon – Tijdschrift voor strafrecht, criminologie en forensisch welzijnswerk – 2016 Student
Panopticon werd in 1980 opgericht als "Tijdschrift voor Strafrecht, Criminologie en Forensisch welzijnswerk". Het feit dat er meerdere disciplines behandeld worden, wijst meteen op de kerndoelstelling van het tijdschrift. Het creëert een forum waarin alle informatie over wat er zich in en rond de strafrechtsbedeling, de criminologie en het forensisch welzijnswerk afspeelt, systematisch en deskundig aan bod komt.Informatie en ideeën van het ene strafrechtelijk actieveld stromen door naar het andere, waar men vroeger in het beste geval een gebrekkig zicht op alle relevante deelfacetten had, en bijgevolg het totaalbeeld uit het oog verloor.
Jaargang 37
Jaargang 36
Abonnement
- Individueel: € 99,95 (bestel nu)
– Studenten: € 49,50 (bestel nu)
<!-- - Opbergband: € 25,- (bestel nu)
-->
Prijzen zijn inclusief btw en verzendkosten.
Meer informatie over Panopticon

Abonnement Panopticon – Tijdschrift voor strafrecht, criminologie en forensisch welzijnswerk – 2016
Panopticon werd in 1980 opgericht als "Tijdschrift voor Strafrecht, Criminologie en Forensisch welzijnswerk". Het feit dat er meerdere disciplines behandeld worden, wijst meteen op de kerndoelstelling van het tijdschrift. Het creëert een forum waarin alle informatie over wat er zich in en rond de strafrechtsbedeling, de criminologie en het forensisch welzijnswerk afspeelt, systematisch en deskundig aan bod komt.Informatie en ideeën van het ene strafrechtelijk actieveld stromen door naar het andere, waar men vroeger in het beste geval een gebrekkig zicht op alle relevante deelfacetten had, en bijgevolg het totaalbeeld uit het oog verloor.
Jaargang 37
Jaargang 36
Abonnement
- Individueel: € 99,95 (bestel nu)
– Studenten: € 49,50 (bestel nu)
<!-- - Opbergband: € 25,- (bestel nu)
-->
Prijzen zijn inclusief btw en verzendkosten.
Meer informatie over Panopticon

Abonnement Panopticon – Tijdschrift voor strafrecht, criminologie en forensisch welzijnswerk – 2016
Panopticon werd in 1980 opgericht als "Tijdschrift voor Strafrecht, Criminologie en Forensisch welzijnswerk". Het feit dat er meerdere disciplines behandeld worden, wijst meteen op de kerndoelstelling van het tijdschrift. Het creëert een forum waarin alle informatie over wat er zich in en rond de strafrechtsbedeling, de criminologie en het forensisch welzijnswerk afspeelt, systematisch en deskundig aan bod komt.Informatie en ideeën van het ene strafrechtelijk actieveld stromen door naar het andere, waar men vroeger in het beste geval een gebrekkig zicht op alle relevante deelfacetten had, en bijgevolg het totaalbeeld uit het oog verloor.
Jaargang 37
Jaargang 36
Abonnement
- Individueel: € 99,95 (bestel nu)
– Studenten: € 49,50 (bestel nu)
<!-- - Opbergband: € 25,- (bestel nu)
-->
Prijzen zijn inclusief btw en verzendkosten.
Meer informatie over Panopticon

European Journal of Policing Studies – Jaargang 3/4 (2015) (ISSN 2034-760x)
Contents:
Introduction
Antoinette Verhage, Lieselot Bisschop, Dominique Boels & Wim Hardyns
Articles
Crafting the domain of policing and public healthin Amsterdam
Pieter-Jaap Aalbersberg (1) & Auke J. van Dijk (2)
Abstract
Policing and public health are intimately related in practice but an explicit conceptual frameworkis missing. The processes of so-called glocalization and of organizations (and issues) becomingincreasingly ‘boundary-less’ – especially in the city – explain part of the growing importance ofthe intersection of policing and public health. But these processes do not provide a conceptualframe, nor does this perspective lead to the much needed practical knowledge on how to craft thisemerging domain. This contribution will use the current strategic challenges for the police in theDutch capital city of Amsterdam as an illustration of the character and importance of the relationsbetween policing and public health. Many issues require close cooperation between the police andpublic health organizations. Although much has been accomplished there is still a lot left to bedesired. Extrapolation of present-day developments suggests that existing modes of cooperationmight not be sufficient and that we need to fundamentally rethink the relation between policingand public health. This article concludes with a tentative agenda for explorative research.
Keywords: police, Law enforcement, Public health, Harm reduction, crafting
(1) Chief Constable of the Amsterdam Police.
(2) senior strategic advisor with the Dutch police.
Instrumental and affectiveinfluences on public trust andpolice legitimacy in Spain
Ben Bradford (1), Richard Martin (2), José GarcÃa-Añón (3), Andrés Gascón-Cuenca (4),José Antonio GarcÃa-Saez (5) & Antoni Llorente-Ferreres (6)
Abstract
Two approaches to the nature and sources of public trust and police legitimacy can be distinguished:the instrumental and the affective. On the first account, people trust in police when they judge iteffective in enforcing the law and fighting crime; and they hold police more legitimate when theybelieve these things to be true. On the second account, trust and legitimacy are bound up withrelational concerns about the quality of police behavior, and expressive factors relating to theperceived ability of communities and police to maintain and reproduce social cohesion and order.Studies in Anglophone contexts tend to conclude that this ‘affective’ account provides greaterexplanatory power. This paper explores these ideas in a new context. Using data from a nationwidesurvey conducted in Spain we examine: (a) the relative strength of instrumental or affectivepredictors of trust; and (b) whether trust in police fairness is a more or less important predictorof legitimacy than trust in police effectiveness. Adding to the weight of international evidenceconcerning the ways people think about and experience policing, evidence for the primacy of theaffective account is presented.
Keywords: Police; trust; legitimacy; public opinion; Spain
(1) Department Lecturer at the Centre for Criminology, University of Oxford.
(2) DPhil Candidate at the Centre for Criminology, University of Oxford
(3) Full Professor at the Department of Philosophy of Law, School of Law,University of Valencia
(4) Researcher Assistant at the Human Rights Institute, University ofValencia
(5) Full Professor at the Academia Interamericana de Derechos Humanos,University of Coahuila (Mexico).
(6) Member of the Human Rights Institute, University of Valencia
The establishment of Police Scotland. An analysis o

European Journal of Policing Studies – Jaargang 3/4 (2015) (ISSN 2034-760x)
Contents:
Introduction
Antoinette Verhage, Lieselot Bisschop, Dominique Boels & Wim Hardyns
Articles
Crafting the domain of policing and public healthin Amsterdam
Pieter-Jaap Aalbersberg (1) & Auke J. van Dijk (2)
Abstract
Policing and public health are intimately related in practice but an explicit conceptual frameworkis missing. The processes of so-called glocalization and of organizations (and issues) becomingincreasingly ‘boundary-less’ – especially in the city – explain part of the growing importance ofthe intersection of policing and public health. But these processes do not provide a conceptualframe, nor does this perspective lead to the much needed practical knowledge on how to craft thisemerging domain. This contribution will use the current strategic challenges for the police in theDutch capital city of Amsterdam as an illustration of the character and importance of the relationsbetween policing and public health. Many issues require close cooperation between the police andpublic health organizations. Although much has been accomplished there is still a lot left to bedesired. Extrapolation of present-day developments suggests that existing modes of cooperationmight not be sufficient and that we need to fundamentally rethink the relation between policingand public health. This article concludes with a tentative agenda for explorative research.
Keywords: police, Law enforcement, Public health, Harm reduction, crafting
(1) Chief Constable of the Amsterdam Police.
(2) senior strategic advisor with the Dutch police.
Instrumental and affectiveinfluences on public trust andpolice legitimacy in Spain
Ben Bradford (1), Richard Martin (2), José GarcÃa-Añón (3), Andrés Gascón-Cuenca (4),José Antonio GarcÃa-Saez (5) & Antoni Llorente-Ferreres (6)
Abstract
Two approaches to the nature and sources of public trust and police legitimacy can be distinguished:the instrumental and the affective. On the first account, people trust in police when they judge iteffective in enforcing the law and fighting crime; and they hold police more legitimate when theybelieve these things to be true. On the second account, trust and legitimacy are bound up withrelational concerns about the quality of police behavior, and expressive factors relating to theperceived ability of communities and police to maintain and reproduce social cohesion and order.Studies in Anglophone contexts tend to conclude that this ‘affective’ account provides greaterexplanatory power. This paper explores these ideas in a new context. Using data from a nationwidesurvey conducted in Spain we examine: (a) the relative strength of instrumental or affectivepredictors of trust; and (b) whether trust in police fairness is a more or less important predictorof legitimacy than trust in police effectiveness. Adding to the weight of international evidenceconcerning the ways people think about and experience policing, evidence for the primacy of theaffective account is presented.
Keywords: Police; trust; legitimacy; public opinion; Spain
(1) Department Lecturer at the Centre for Criminology, University of Oxford.
(2) DPhil Candidate at the Centre for Criminology, University of Oxford
(3) Full Professor at the Department of Philosophy of Law, School of Law,University of Valencia
(4) Researcher Assistant at the Human Rights Institute, University ofValencia
(5) Full Professor at the Academia Interamericana de Derechos Humanos,University of Coahuila (Mexico).
(6) Member of the Human Rights Institute, University of Valencia
The establishment of Police Scotland. An analysis o

European Journal of Policing Studies – Jaargang 3/3 (2015) (ISSN 2034-760x)
Contents:
Introduction
A. Verhage, L. Bisschop, W. Hardyns & D. Boels
Articles
Knowledge SharingPractices and Issues inPolicing Contexts. A Systematic Review of theLiterature*
K. Griffiths (1), K. Birdi (2), V.Alsina (3), D. Andrei (4), A.Baban (5), P.S. Bayerl (6), F. Bisogni (7),S. Chirica (8), P. Costanzo (9),M. Gascó (10), M. Gruschinske (11),K. Horton (12), G. Jacobs (13), T.Jochoms (14), K. Krstevska (15), S.Mirceva (16), C. Mouhanna (17), A.van den Oord (18), C. Otoiu (19), R.Rajkovcevski (20), L. Ratiu (21), Z.Reguli (22), C. Rus (23), S. Stein-Müller (24), T. Stojanovski (25), M.Varga (26), M. VÃta (27) & G. Vonas (28)
Abstract
The effective sharing of knowledge both within and between police organizations is arguablybecoming increasingly vital for success and has driven research in a disparate range of fields. Thispaper therefore presents the results of an integrative systematic literature review of research intoknowledge sharing within and between police organizations across Europe. The 39 papers analysedwere drawn from English-language studies published between 2000 and 2013, complemented byadditional searches for non-English language papers in nine European countries. Analyses showedthat past research has focused on intra-organizational knowledge sharing, with a particular spotlighton criminal intelligence and technology. Barriers / enablers of knowledge sharing were grouped intoknowledge management strategy/legislation, technology, culture and loss of knowledge themes.Research recommendations include exploring the role of leadership and examination of policeknowledge sharing across regional, institutional and international boundaries. Practical recommendationsinclude having procedural clarity in systems, policies for sharing knowledge and developingthe relevant knowledge, skills and motivation of police personnel through appropriate training.
Keywords: knowledge sharing, information, systematic literature review, police
* The first two authors (Kerry Griffiths and Kamal Birdi) are joint first authors on the paper.
(1) Sheffield Hallam University, UK.
(2) University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK.
(3) Fundacion ESADE, Spain.
(4) Babe?-Bolyai University, Romania.
(5) Babe?-Bolyai University, Romania.
(6) Erasmus University Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
(7) Fondazione per la Ricerca sulla Migrazione e sulla Integrazione delle Tecnologie (FORMIT), Italy.
(8) Babe?-Bolyai University, Romania.
(9) Fondazione per la Ricerca sulla Migrazione e sulla Integrazione delle Tecnologie (FORMIT), Italy.
(10) Fundacion ESADE, Spain.
(11) Fachhochschule der Polizei des Landes Brandenburg (FHPolBB), Germany.
(12) Erasmus University Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
(13) Erasmus University Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
(14) Police Academy of the Netherlands, the Netherlands.
(15) University St Kliment Ohridski, Republic of Macedonia.
(16) University St Kliment Ohridski, Republic of Macedonia.
(17) Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), France.
(18) University of Antwerp, Belgium.
(19) Babe?-Bolyai University, Romania.
(20) University St Kliment Ohridski, Republic of Macedonia.
(21) Babe?-Bolyai University, Romania.
(22) Masaryk University, Czech Republic.
(23) Babe?-Bolyai University, Romania.
(24) Fachhochschule der Polizei des Landes Brandenburg (FHPolBB), Germany.
(25) University St Kliment Ohridski, Republic of Macedonia.
(26) Babe?-Bolyai University, Romania.
(27) Masaryk University, Czech Republic.
(28) Babe?-Bolyai University, Romania.
Private Policing of Financial

European Journal of Policing Studies – Jaargang 3/3 (2015) (ISSN 2034-760x)
Contents:
Introduction
A. Verhage, L. Bisschop, W. Hardyns & D. Boels
Articles
Knowledge SharingPractices and Issues inPolicing Contexts. A Systematic Review of theLiterature*
K. Griffiths (1), K. Birdi (2), V.Alsina (3), D. Andrei (4), A.Baban (5), P.S. Bayerl (6), F. Bisogni (7),S. Chirica (8), P. Costanzo (9),M. Gascó (10), M. Gruschinske (11),K. Horton (12), G. Jacobs (13), T.Jochoms (14), K. Krstevska (15), S.Mirceva (16), C. Mouhanna (17), A.van den Oord (18), C. Otoiu (19), R.Rajkovcevski (20), L. Ratiu (21), Z.Reguli (22), C. Rus (23), S. Stein-Müller (24), T. Stojanovski (25), M.Varga (26), M. VÃta (27) & G. Vonas (28)
Abstract
The effective sharing of knowledge both within and between police organizations is arguablybecoming increasingly vital for success and has driven research in a disparate range of fields. Thispaper therefore presents the results of an integrative systematic literature review of research intoknowledge sharing within and between police organizations across Europe. The 39 papers analysedwere drawn from English-language studies published between 2000 and 2013, complemented byadditional searches for non-English language papers in nine European countries. Analyses showedthat past research has focused on intra-organizational knowledge sharing, with a particular spotlighton criminal intelligence and technology. Barriers / enablers of knowledge sharing were grouped intoknowledge management strategy/legislation, technology, culture and loss of knowledge themes.Research recommendations include exploring the role of leadership and examination of policeknowledge sharing across regional, institutional and international boundaries. Practical recommendationsinclude having procedural clarity in systems, policies for sharing knowledge and developingthe relevant knowledge, skills and motivation of police personnel through appropriate training.
Keywords: knowledge sharing, information, systematic literature review, police
* The first two authors (Kerry Griffiths and Kamal Birdi) are joint first authors on the paper.
(1) Sheffield Hallam University, UK.
(2) University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK.
(3) Fundacion ESADE, Spain.
(4) Babe?-Bolyai University, Romania.
(5) Babe?-Bolyai University, Romania.
(6) Erasmus University Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
(7) Fondazione per la Ricerca sulla Migrazione e sulla Integrazione delle Tecnologie (FORMIT), Italy.
(8) Babe?-Bolyai University, Romania.
(9) Fondazione per la Ricerca sulla Migrazione e sulla Integrazione delle Tecnologie (FORMIT), Italy.
(10) Fundacion ESADE, Spain.
(11) Fachhochschule der Polizei des Landes Brandenburg (FHPolBB), Germany.
(12) Erasmus University Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
(13) Erasmus University Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
(14) Police Academy of the Netherlands, the Netherlands.
(15) University St Kliment Ohridski, Republic of Macedonia.
(16) University St Kliment Ohridski, Republic of Macedonia.
(17) Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), France.
(18) University of Antwerp, Belgium.
(19) Babe?-Bolyai University, Romania.
(20) University St Kliment Ohridski, Republic of Macedonia.
(21) Babe?-Bolyai University, Romania.
(22) Masaryk University, Czech Republic.
(23) Babe?-Bolyai University, Romania.
(24) Fachhochschule der Polizei des Landes Brandenburg (FHPolBB), Germany.
(25) University St Kliment Ohridski, Republic of Macedonia.
(26) Babe?-Bolyai University, Romania.
(27) Masaryk University, Czech Republic.
(28) Babe?-Bolyai University, Romania.
Private Policing of Financial

European Journal of Policing Studies – Jaargang 3/1 (2015) (ISSN 2034-760x)
Contents:
Introduction
A. Verhage, L. Bisschop, W. Hardyns
Articles
‘Moral’ versus ‘Risk-based’ Policing of Cybercrime.Insights from Police Response to Internet Fraud in Saudi Arabia’sCapital City, Riyadh
A.F. Algarni (1)
Abstract
This paper contributes to current debates on the policing of Internet fraud by introducing theSaudi Arabian experience. Drawing on field research in the capital city, Riyadh, it explores how thisnew aspect of policing activity fits in with not only the existing organisational practices, but alsothe occupational and individual concerns of frontline officers. Moreover, the article considers theimplications of the Saudi culture, social norms, and values for police responses to Internet fraud.It is argued that the policing of Internet fraud in Saudi Arabia, and the extent to which it fits withcontemporary debates on risk-based policing of cybercrime, can only be understood by examininghow new policing modes and cultural traditions merge and integrate to shape police response tothis novel criminal phenomenon.
Keywords: fraud, internet, cybercrime, policing, risk, morality
(1) Assistant Professor of Criminology at King Fahad Security College’s Centre forStudies and Research.
Policing Online ChildSexual Abuse. The British Experience
E. Martelozzo (1)
Abstract
Incidents of child sexual abuse (CSA) are frequently documented and have recently attracted intensepolice, public scrutiny and efforts of social control across the Western world. This paper aims toexplore the very concerning issue of online CSA and the way in which the police is responding tothis growing problem. It will present some of the challenges the police in the United Kingdomface daily in dealing with the threats to children’s online safety. It argues that although proactiveundercover policing has helped police forces to unmask sex offenders who predate innocentvictims online, the advancement of technology is making the work of police officers more and morechallenging. The findings presented have been collected over the last decade (2003-2013) duringtwo exploratory, grounded theory studies, which involved the interviews with 21 police officersand forensic examiners and the observation and analysis of three police operations at the LondonMetropolitan Police Paedophile Unit in London.
Keywords: online child sexual abuse, online safety, technology, undercover policing, police challenges
(1) Criminologist at Middlesex University in London.
The Italian Police Forces intoNeoliberal Frame. An Example of Perpetual Coexistenceof Democratic and AuthoritarianPractices and of Anamorphosis ofDemocratic Rules of Law
S. Palidda (1)
Abstract
This text proposes a description and analysis of the Italian police forces. The approach adoptedspecifically regards their social and political construction and therefore their practices within thepolitical organization of society. In order to better analyse the social construction of the Italianpolice case, I propose regarding the police as one of the several social institutions involved in thecontinuous experimentation to find a political organization of society. Research into the Italianpolice forces has been, and is still, very rare. In this paper I refer to research that I have carried outon the Italian police forces since 1990, and also to other documents and knowledge gathered injudicial inquiries and from reliable special reports.
Keywords: Italian police forces, anamorphosis of the rules of law, tolerated and intolerable illegalities,discretion of police forces, ignored insecurities
(1) Professor a

European Journal of Policing Studies – Jaargang 3/1 (2015) (ISSN 2034-760x)
Contents:
Introduction
A. Verhage, L. Bisschop, W. Hardyns
Articles
‘Moral’ versus ‘Risk-based’ Policing of Cybercrime.Insights from Police Response to Internet Fraud in Saudi Arabia’sCapital City, Riyadh
A.F. Algarni (1)
Abstract
This paper contributes to current debates on the policing of Internet fraud by introducing theSaudi Arabian experience. Drawing on field research in the capital city, Riyadh, it explores how thisnew aspect of policing activity fits in with not only the existing organisational practices, but alsothe occupational and individual concerns of frontline officers. Moreover, the article considers theimplications of the Saudi culture, social norms, and values for police responses to Internet fraud.It is argued that the policing of Internet fraud in Saudi Arabia, and the extent to which it fits withcontemporary debates on risk-based policing of cybercrime, can only be understood by examininghow new policing modes and cultural traditions merge and integrate to shape police response tothis novel criminal phenomenon.
Keywords: fraud, internet, cybercrime, policing, risk, morality
(1) Assistant Professor of Criminology at King Fahad Security College’s Centre forStudies and Research.
Policing Online ChildSexual Abuse. The British Experience
E. Martelozzo (1)
Abstract
Incidents of child sexual abuse (CSA) are frequently documented and have recently attracted intensepolice, public scrutiny and efforts of social control across the Western world. This paper aims toexplore the very concerning issue of online CSA and the way in which the police is responding tothis growing problem. It will present some of the challenges the police in the United Kingdomface daily in dealing with the threats to children’s online safety. It argues that although proactiveundercover policing has helped police forces to unmask sex offenders who predate innocentvictims online, the advancement of technology is making the work of police officers more and morechallenging. The findings presented have been collected over the last decade (2003-2013) duringtwo exploratory, grounded theory studies, which involved the interviews with 21 police officersand forensic examiners and the observation and analysis of three police operations at the LondonMetropolitan Police Paedophile Unit in London.
Keywords: online child sexual abuse, online safety, technology, undercover policing, police challenges
(1) Criminologist at Middlesex University in London.
The Italian Police Forces intoNeoliberal Frame. An Example of Perpetual Coexistenceof Democratic and AuthoritarianPractices and of Anamorphosis ofDemocratic Rules of Law
S. Palidda (1)
Abstract
This text proposes a description and analysis of the Italian police forces. The approach adoptedspecifically regards their social and political construction and therefore their practices within thepolitical organization of society. In order to better analyse the social construction of the Italianpolice case, I propose regarding the police as one of the several social institutions involved in thecontinuous experimentation to find a political organization of society. Research into the Italianpolice forces has been, and is still, very rare. In this paper I refer to research that I have carried outon the Italian police forces since 1990, and also to other documents and knowledge gathered injudicial inquiries and from reliable special reports.
Keywords: Italian police forces, anamorphosis of the rules of law, tolerated and intolerable illegalities,discretion of police forces, ignored insecurities
(1) Professor a