Ben Bowling is Professor of Criminology & Criminal Justice at King's College London where he served as Acting Dean and Deputy Dean of the Dickson Poon School of Law (2014-16). Prior to joining King's as Lecturer in Law in 1999, Ben was a lecturer at the University of Cambridge Institute of Criminology, Assistant Professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice (City University of New York) and Senior Research Officer in the Home Office. He has held visiting positions at Fitzwilliam College Cambridge, Humboldt University, University of Paris 2, University of the West Indies, Monash, and the East China University of Political Science and Law. Ben's research examines practical, political and legal problems in policing and the connections between local and global police power. His work exploring themes of fairness, effectiveness and accountability has been published in the Modern Law Review, Criminal Law Review and Theoretical Criminology and in recent books - Policing the Caribbean, Global Policing, Stop & Search: Police Power in Global Context. His most recent book is the 5th edition of the Politics of the Police with James Sheptycki and Robert Reiner (OUP) Ben Bowling submitted written evidence to the Stephen Lawrence Inquiry (1999) and to the Home Affairs Select Committee in 2007 and 2020. Has been an adviser to the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, Equality and Human Rights Commission, Interpol and the United Nations. He was awarded the Radzinowicz Memorial Prize for the best article in the British Journal of Criminology in 1999 and was elected a Fellow the Academy of Social Sciences in 2005. His special research expertise revolves around issues of transnational crime and policing. He has written on a variety of substantive criminological topics including domestic violence, serial killers, money laundering, drugs, public order policing, organized crime, police accountability, intelligence-led policing, witness protection, risk and insecurity. He is currently engaged in research concerning 'guns, crime and social order'.
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Theorising Global Policing The Problems of Global Policing Policing Social Theory Policing and the Social Contract Policing and Political Theory Policing and Law Colonial Policing Types of Transnational Policing Conclusion: Policing an Insecure World Policing and the Transnational-State-System The Changing Morphology of the State Jurisdictional Sovereignty and Functional Diversity in Policing Agenda Setting and Transnational Policing Priorities Legal Discourse and Law-Making in International Police Co-Operation Developments in Europe Developments in the United States Multi-Agency Co-Operation: The Military, Security and Private Sectors Conclusion: Policing the New World Order The Global Policing Architecture Global Police Agencies Regional Police Agencies National Policing Hubs Private Transnational Policing Global Policing Conclusion The Occupational Subcultures of Global Policing Police Liaison Officers and the Transnational Space Between Subcultural Theory and Policing The Parameters of Policing Subculture Meet the Global Cops The Varied Occupational Character of Global Cops Global Policing, Subculture and Accountability Conclusion: Occupational Policing Subcultures - Global Thoughts/Local Acts Global Policing in Practice Policing Transnational Spaces Policing Border Zones Policing the Oceans Policing Cyberspace Policing Mega-Events Policing Transnational Flows Policing People: Migrants, Criminals, Terrorists and other Suspect Populations Policing Drugs and Guns Policing Money Conclusion: The Consequences of Global Policing Conclusion: The Global Cops Have Arrived

