Policing the Waterfront:
Networks, Partnerships,
and the Governance of Port Security
by Russell Brewer (Author)
Long recognised as a
site where criminal elements have flourished, the waterfront has been exploited
for centuries by opportunistic individuals for a whole raft of illicit
purposes. Policing the Waterfront: Networks, Partnerships, and the Governance
of Port Security is the first book of its kind to fully explore the intricacies
of how crime is controlled on the waterfront, and in doing so, seeks to enhance
current theoretical understandings of the policing partnerships that exist
between state and non-state actors.
Charting the complex
configuration of security networks using a range of analytical techniques, this
book presents new empirical data, which exposes and explains the social
structures that enable policing partnerships to function on the waterfront.
Particularly striking is the use of enhanced and adjusted theoretical
discussions, to both shape and develop previous policing and security debates -
resulting in a work that is both innovative and, yet, still routed in the
traditions of empirical
research. The analysis
is achieved through a comparative research design, evaluating the narratives of
both state and non-state security providers at the busiest ports in America and
Australia: the Los Angeles/Long Beach Port Complex and the Port of Melbourne.
Policing the Waterfront
presents a rich and highly original account of the underlying structures that
foster, facilitate, and enhance policing partnerships on the waterfront, and
will be of interest to scholars in the fields of criminology, sociology, law,
socio-legal and policy studies, as well as those researching and studying
policing, regulation, security, mass transportation, and social capital.