How States Facilitate Small Arms Trafficking in Africa: A Theoretical and Juristic Interpretation

D. Rothe, Jeffrey Ian Ross
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Small arms’ trafficking is complex and involves a host of actors. As numerous court documents, transcripts, United Nations and NGO reports have revealed, many state institutions play a prominent role in the facilitation of, complicity in, and implicit involvement in black and grey arms trafficking. We suggest that if we are to consider the vast number of actors involved in the trafficking of small arms, the issue of controls is highly problematic, given the extent of limited applicable international legal doctrines, such as joint criminal enterprise, criminal organization, or collective criminality. Furthermore, there are broader political issues that hinder efforts of control as highlighted by the state crime literature, including issues of enforcement, political will and states’ positions to hinder the advancement of levels of accountability for their own behaviors. Consequentially, our focus here is not to empirically test the etiological factors of states complicit or implicit involvement in arms trafficking, but instead to move the discussion forward to broader theoretical and juristic issues associated with efforts to control arms trafficking. If the goal is to reduce illegal arms trafficking (and subsequent numbers of civilian deaths) policies and controls must be based, not only on the immediate or apparent actors, the role of states in the facilitation of this type of crime.
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国家如何促进非洲的小武器贩运:理论和法律解释
小武器贩运是复杂的,涉及许多行动者。正如大量法庭文件、笔录、联合国和非政府组织报告所揭示的那样,许多国家机构在促进、共谋和暗中参与黑色和灰色武器贩运方面发挥了突出作用。我们建议,如果我们要考虑到参与贩运小武器的大量行为者,考虑到诸如联合犯罪企业、犯罪组织或集体犯罪等有限的适用国际法理论的程度,管制问题是一个很大的问题。此外,正如国家犯罪文献所强调的那样,还有更广泛的政治问题阻碍了控制的努力,包括执法问题、政治意愿和国家的立场,阻碍了对自己行为的问责水平的提高。因此,我们在这里的重点不是从经验上检验国家同谋或隐含参与武器贩运的病因因素,而是将讨论推进到与控制武器贩运努力相关的更广泛的理论和法律问题。如果目标是减少非法武器贩运(以及随后造成的平民死亡人数),那么政策和控制就必须不仅以直接或明显的行为者为基础,而且必须以国家在促进这类犯罪方面的作用为基础。
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'If Those Old Women Catch You, You're Going to Cop It': Night Patrols, Indigenous Women, and Place Based Sovereignty in Outback Australia How States Facilitate Small Arms Trafficking in Africa: A Theoretical and Juristic Interpretation
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