Photo AI
Last Updated Sep 26, 2025
Revision notes with simplified explanations to understand Globalisation and Crime quickly and effectively.
304+ students studying
How has globalisation led to new crimes emerging?
Has Globalisation actually happened?
Postmodernists: believe globalisation is a significant feature of contemporary society and has a massive impact on crime. The Global Criminal Economy:
Held et al suggest there has also been a globalisation of crime = an increasing interconnectedness of crime across borders.
The same processes that have brought the globalisation of legal activities have done the same to illegal activities = which has led to the spread of transnational organised crime across national borders.
Castells argues that there is now a global criminal economy worth over ÂŁ1 trillion per annum Types of Transnational Organised Crime
Cybercrime = the fastest growing criminal activity in the world.
It is global in the sense that many of the offenders have links to outside the country.
Detica (2011) = cybercrime costs the UK $27 billion each year. The Global Criminal Economy:
This supply is linked to the globalisation process -Third World drugs - producing countries such as Colombia and Afghanistan have large populations of impoverished peasants.
Drug cultivation is an attractive option for them - little investment in technology + commands high prices compared with traditional crops.
In Colombia, 20% of the population depends on cocaine production for their livelihood - cocaine outsells all Colombia's other exports combined. Transnational organised crime:
Farr suggests that there are 2 main forms of global criminal networks:
Castells highlights the unreasoning international linkages between criminal groups due to globalisation.
Glenny (2009) uses the term "McMafia" to describe the way transnational organised crime mirrors the activities of legal transnational corporations (like McDonalds)
They seek to provide and sell products across the world - self-interested organisations in pursuit of money success.
Rather than selling burgers, they're selling drugs, sex, guns, body organs, pornography e.c.t The McMafia:
Under communism, the Soviet state had regulated the prices of everything
After the fall of communism, the Russian government deregulated most sectors of the economy except for natural resources such as oil = these commodities remained at their old Soviet prices, often only a fortieth of the world market price.
Thus, anyone with access to funds, such as former communist officials and KGB (secret service) generals - could buy oil, gas, diamonds etc for next to nothing = and then they could sell them abroad at an astronomical profit.
= these people became Russia's new capitalist class (Oligarchs)
The fall of communism resulted in increasing disorder and these wealthy capitalists now needed protection.
They hired 'mafias' to protect their interests and move their money/products out of the country.
These were the KGB/ex-convicts who were once employed by the Communist state - but the government no longer existed.
Criminal organisations were vital to the entry of the new Russian capitalist class in the world economy.
At the same time, the Russian mafias were able to build links with criminal organisations in other parts of the world. Glenny:
Organised crime has taken over the world.
500 million people are involved in global crime.
Main zones of distribution are Mexico and the Bulcans, main zones of consumption were Japan, the EU and the US.
The primary driver of international organised crime is the Western desire to consume. From global to local - Globalism:
Hobbs and Dunnigham suggest that the global criminal networks work within local contexts as independent local units.
The international drug trade and human trafficking require local networks of dealers, pimps and sex clubs to organise supply at a local level and existing local criminals need to connect to global networks to continue their activities.
Hobbs coined the term 'glocal' to describe the interconnectivity between local and the global, with transnational crime really rooted in glocalities - local contexts with global links. A02 - Synoptic link to Winlow:
Winlow's study of bouncers in Sunderland - they are now involved in lucrative crime opportunities due to globalisation - drug dealing, duty-free tobacco, alcohol e.c.t How has globalisation affected crime?
Deregulation: means that governments have little control over their economies e.g. to create jobs or raise taxes, while state spending on welfare has declined.
Marketisation has encouraged people to see themselves as individual consumers thereby undermining social cohesion.
Left realists argue increasing materialistic culture promoted by global media portrays success in terms of lifestyle of consumption.
All these factors create insecurity, widening inequality that encourages people, especially the poor to commit crimes.
The lack of legitimate opportunity destroys self-respect and drives the unemployed to look for illegitimate ones.
Marginalisation -> crime A02 synoptic link: Merton strain and 'keeping up with the Joneses'
At the same time, globalisation creates criminal opportunities for elite groups on a grand scale. For example, deregulation of financial markets create an opportunity for the movement of funds across the globe to avoid taxation
Globalisation has also led to new patterns of employment - people employed for less than minimum wage, people working in breach of health and safety or other labour laws. A03 - Evaluation:
Strength: Taylor's theory is useful in linking global trends in the capitalist economy to changes in the patterns of crime.
Weaknesses: it does not adequately explain how the changes make people behave in criminal ways. For example, not all the poor turn to crime - a deterministic approach
Strengths: The study of globalisation is relevant and contemporary. This helps to put new crimes into perspective and gain an understanding.
Weaknesses: The secretive and complex nature makes it hard to investigate
What is green crime? - 2 definitions:
Advantage: it has a clearly defined subject matter
Disadvantages: They simply accept the definitions of environmental problems and crimes, which are typically shaped by powerful groups
Also – the same harmful environmental action may be defined as illegal in some countries but not in others
Strength: Recognises the growing environmental concerns and the need to address the harms and risks of the environment
Weaknesses: One problem with all forms of transgressive criminology is the difficulty of categorisation. By focusing simply on "harm" the activity that could come under criminologists' investigations is almost infinite.
Anthropocentric (Human-centred view) - this assumes humans have the right to dominate nature for their own ends and our economic growth before the environment
This view is usually adopted by national states and transnational corporations. Eco-centric:
This view sees humans and their environment as interdependent so environmental harm hurts humans too.
This view sees both humans and the environment as liable to exploitation, particularly by global capitalism
This view is usually adopted by green criminologists for judging environmental harm Primary and Secondary Green Crimes - South (2014)
📝Examples of primary green crime:
State violence against oppositional groups:
1985 French secret service blew up the Greenpeace ship Rainbow Warrior in Auckland harbour, New Zealand.
The ship was trying to prevent the French testing of nuclear weapons Hazardous waste and organised crime:
High cost of safe and legal disposal, businesses may seek to dispose of such wastes illegally -2004 tsunami – hundreds of barrels of radioactive waste were illegally dumped by European companies on the shores of Somalia Bhopal Disaster 1984:
Union Carbide chemical company leaked poisonous gas
Affected 500,000 people
By 2012 – around 25,000 deaths
At least 120,000 people still suffering severe symptoms e.g. blindness and birth defects in children Traditional criminological approach: the disaster arose because Union Carbide broke local health and safety laws
Transgressive criminological approach: Union Carbide deliberately located plants in countries where health and safety laws were weak and there was less concern for the environment
Volkswagen Emissions Scandal 2015:
11 million vehicles were illegally fitted with a defeat device aimed at cheating emission tests
Breached environmental regulations
The company was possibly responsible for nearly 1m tonnes of extra air pollution every year Green crime, globalisation and global risk society:
Beck argues that many environmental disasters in the past, such as droughts, famine and flooding were a result of natural origin and largely outside human control
In late modern societies, he suggests there are new kinds of risk that are created by the actions of humans through the application of science and technology.
Beck refers to potentially disastrous consequences for the global environment
Events in one country might have consequences in many, e.g. deforestation of the Amazon rainforests creating major climate changes
The use of nuclear energy creates a growing problem of nuclear waste disposal as well as increasing risks of nuclear accidents.
White = globalised character of environmental harms by the way transnational corporations move manufacturing operations to the Global South to avoid pollution laws. Global risk society - Beck
Some sociologists argue that globalisation is also an important factor in green crime.
While some environmental crimes are local in character, many cross national borders such as pollution.
This link with Beck (late modernist) works on a global risk society - where he points to issues like global warming and the way they pose a risk to the whole world.
He argues that many of these risks are manufactured risks that have been created by the way we organise contemporary society.
He argues that in today's late modern society, there are new kinds of risks created by the actions of humans through science and technology.
As a result he increased productivity and technology that sustains these resources have created manufactured risk which could involve harm to the environment and consequences for humanity.
Wolf (2011) identifies 4 groups who commit green crimes:
Victims are more likely to be of a working class background or from a minority ethnic group - in both developed and undeveloped countries.
Potter = there is an 'environmental racism': those suffering the worst effects of environmental damage are of different ethnicity from those causing the damage.
People living in the developing world (which were legal and illegal dumping sites) face greater risks of exposure to pollution than those in the developed world
In the developed world - it is the working class that face greater risks of pollution + consequences of industrial accidents. Enforcement against green crimes:
Governments create and enforce laws and regulations that control green crime - but they often form policies in collaboration with the businesses that are principal offenders. A02 - Synoptic link: to Snider (Mx) = states are reluctant to pass laws + regulations against pollution ect as they may lose funding/support.
May be pressured to pass them due to opposition groups e.g. Greenpeace Often, green crime does not carry the same stigma as street crime:
Transnational corporations (TNC's) have the power to de-label the crimes
Can get away with it or pay fines - link to Cicourel and typifications
Higher fine in 2011-12 = ÂŁ170,000, just 16 prison sentences given out (longest was 27 months)
Corporations will take the risk (rational choice theory)
Poorer countries don't have the resources, political will or power to enforce restrictions - which makes it an easy place to commit green crime. Marxists - blame capitalism:
According to Marxists, the single biggest cause of green crimes is industrial capitalism
The primary aim of most governments is achieving economic growth, and the means whereby we achieve this is through producing and consuming stuff
As it stands, companies are all too often given the green light by governments to extract and pollute.
An important part of a Marxist analysis of green crime is to explore who the victims of green crime are, and the victims of pollution tend to be the poorest in society. E.g. Bhopal tragedy (eco-racism?!)
Wolf states that it is those in the developing world, the poor and ethnic minorities that are most likely to face the effects of environmental crime.
This is due to their inability to move away from areas where these crimes take place. For example, the people of Bhopal in India who were the victims of the Union Carbide gas leak in December 1984
It needs to be cut out (capitalism is like cancer)
Capitalism is dependent on infinite growth within the planet
Losing key resources/species/aspects of the environment due to capitalism and economic growth
Global economy growing at 3% a year (doubles every 24 years)
Links to an anthropocentric view
Corporations using third world countries for illegal dumping – space going to run out in future
Money = resources = natural right to do what they want = Rich are to blame
He advocates communist ideals Green crime and Fracking:
Fracking = refers to the process of extracting shale gas from solid rock deep underground using hydraulic fracturing the rock.
Green criminologists believe that fracking creates environmental risks - earthquakes, air pollution, groundwater contamination
Traditional criminologists argue it's good, creates jobs and reduces the import of liquid natural gas, and reduces the burning of coal.
Tracking can be seen as a state corporate crime - Lampkin (2016) = trade-off between possible public + environmental health risks + potential for economic development + expansion of the other. Marxists would support this view. Now fracking is illegal in the UK.
Lampkin can be criticised as it creates loads of jobs and helps the economy. Problems with researching green crimes:
Sociologists face a number of difficulties in researching green crime:
Different laws: countries have different laws about green crime, which means that official statistics may not always be comparable between different countries.
Different definitions: there is some dispute over what counts as a green crime and this will vary between different researchers and nations.
Wolf = this generates problems in the measurement, monitoring and reporting of green crime and there are a few reliable and standardised sources of data.
Difficulties in measurement: green crime is often carried out by individual organised crime syndicates, powerful states and multinational corporations who will have the capacity to conceal their crimes and the most powerful can often avoid persecution (negotiation of justice) even if their crimes are discovered. State crimes:
Green & Ward: "State crime is the illegal or deviant activities perpetrated by or with the complicity of state agencies".
It includes all forms of crime committed by or on behalf of states and governments in order to further their policies.
State crimes do not include acts that merely benefit individuals who work for the state, such as police officers who accept bribes. The Seriousness of State Crime:
Its power means that it can conceal its crime, evade punishment for them and even avoid defining its own actions as criminal in the first place
State crime undermines the system of justice and public faith in it.
However the principle of national sovereignty - that states are the supreme authority within their own borders - makes it difficult for external authorities (e.g. EU) to intervene. This is despite the existence of international conventions and laws against acts such as genocide. 📝Examples of state crimes:
Torture and illegal treatment or punishment of citizens.
Gaddafi regime in Libya - overthrown in 2011
The UK in the 1970s used 'white noise' to torture IRA suspects.
The UK paid ÂŁ14 million in compensation to Iraqis who were illegally tortured and detained
US - Guantanamo Bay
War crimes: Israel has repeatedly been condemned for the deliberate targeting of civilian populations in the Israel-Palestine conflict. UK accused of war crimes in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.
Corruption: organised stealing of money e.g. Egyptian dictator Mubarak - embezzled money
Assassination or 'targeted killing': Instruments of state power, Mahmoud al-Mabhouh - the Palestinian Hama commander was killed in Dubai in 2010
Genocide: the systematic mass murder of people belonging to an ethnic, national or religious group, Natzi's against the Jews, Rwanda genocide of 1994
State-sponsored terrorism: the state itself carrying out terrorist acts or supporting others doing it. The US supported illegal rebel groups against elected regimes e.g. in Central and South America. Problems with defining state crimes:
Different definitions of State crime:
A03: However, using a state explanation of crime is inadequate and ignores the fact that the state can manipulate the definition.
For example, during Natzi Germany, laws were legalised permitting it to compulsorily sterilise the disabled.
This definition prevents states from ruling themselves 'out of court', by making laws that allow them to misbehave. It also creates a single standard that can be applied to different states to identify which ones are most harmful to human or environmental well-being.
A03: critics argue that the harm definition is very vague - how much harm must occur before an act is defined as a crime? Who decides what counts as harm?
A03: this definition is even vaguer than social harms
International law: some sociologists base their definition of state crime on international law – laws created through treaties and agreements between states e.g. Geneva + Hague Conventions on war crimes. For example – Rothe and Mullins (2008) define state crime as or behalf of a state that violates international law and/or a state's own domestic law.
Advantage: uses globally agreed definitions of state crime: intentionally designed to deal with state crime, unlike domestic law. A03: Laws are made by individual states, International law is socially constructed, involving the use of power, for example, sociologists found that countries have changed their laws to suit their actions.
Human rights: Sociologists use human rights as a way of defining state crime:
Natural rights – rights people naturally have, e.g. right to live
Civil rights – such as the right to vote, to privacy and to fair trial and education Herman and Schwendinger (1975) argue we should define crime as the violation of people's basic human rights by the state or its agents states that practice imperialism, racism, sexism and economic exploitation are committing crimes because they are denying people their basic rights
Risse et al (1998) argue that the strength of this perspective – all states share the same ethos, of shared human rights.
A03: Cohen criticises Schwendinger arguing that crimes like torture are explicitly open crimes, whilst economic exploitation is more hidden and is not a self-evident crime.
The Authoritarian Personality:
Crimes of obedience
State crimes are crimes of conformity, because they require obedience from a higher authority – the state or its representative.Researchers suggests that many people are willing to obey authority even when this involves harming others – sociologists argue that such actions are part of a role into which individuals are socialised. Kelman & Hamilton (1989) identify 3 general features that produce crimes of obedience:
Authorisation = when acts are ordered or approved by those in authority, normal moral principles are replaced by the duty to obey.
Routinisation = once the crime has been committed, there is a strong pressure to turn the act into a routine that individuals can perform in a detached manner.
Dehumanisation = when the enemy is portrayed as sub-human, normal principles of morality do not apply.
Bauman - the Holocaust was made possible by these processes. My Lai Massacre in Vietnam: 400 civilians were killed by American soldiers, 26 soldiers charged and 1 convicted.
Culture of Denial:
Stage 1 - 'It didn't happen' e.g. the state claims there was no massacre but then human rights organisations, victims and the media show it did happen.
Stage 2 - 'If it did happen, "it" is something else'. The state says it is not what it looks like- it's 'collateral damage' or 'self-defence'.
Stage 3 - 'Even if it is what you say it is, it's justified'- e.g. 'to protect national security' or 'fight the war on terror' e.g. US entering Iraq. A02 - Stage 1 example
US government's active collusion in the cover-up of the 1981 El Mozote massacre in El Salvador.
The Salvadoran Army killed more than 800 civilians in the civil war
At the same time as claiming that its El Salvadoran ally was making every effort to improve its human rights record (and therefore was eligible for aid to be certified by Congress), US Embassy officials in El Salvador and the State Department were involved in baroque manoeuvres to deny what they knew about the massacre
Salvadoran army and government leaders denied the reports and officials of the Reagan administration called them "gross exaggerations". The Associated Press reported that "the U.S. Embassy disputed the reports, saying its investigation had found that no more than 300 people had lived in El Mozote Culture of denial - Neutralisation theory:
Cohen examines the ways in which states and their officials deny or justify their crimes. He draws on the work of Sykes and Matza, who identify 5 neutralisation techniques that delinquents use to justify their deviant behaviour.
Enhance your understanding with flashcards, quizzes, and exams—designed to help you grasp key concepts, reinforce learning, and master any topic with confidence!
90 flashcards
Flashcards on Globalisation and Crime
Revise key concepts with interactive flashcards.
Try Sociology Flashcards9 quizzes
Quizzes on Globalisation and Crime
Test your knowledge with fun and engaging quizzes.
Try Sociology Quizzes29 questions
Exam questions on Globalisation and Crime
Boost your confidence with real exam questions.
Try Sociology Questions27 exams created
Exam Builder on Globalisation and Crime
Create custom exams across topics for better practice!
Try Sociology exam builder6 papers
Past Papers on Globalisation and Crime
Practice past papers to reinforce exam experience.
Try Sociology Past PapersDiscover More Revision Notes Related to Globalisation and Crime to Deepen Your Understanding and Improve Your Mastery
96%
114 rated
Crime and Deviance
Social Distribution of Crime (patterns and trends)
313+ studying
185KViewsJoin 500,000+ A-Level students using SimpleStudy...
Join Thousands of A-Level Students Using SimpleStudy to Learn Smarter, Stay Organized, and Boost Their Grades with Confidence!
Report Improved Results
Recommend to friends
Students Supported
Questions answered