
Events for 2009
The events listed below are open to the public and are free of charge, unless a registration fee has been specified. Email ceps@anu.edu.au for
further details and to RSVP for catering purposes.
One-day parking permits are available for visitors to the ANU campus. Please contact
ceps@anu.edu.au
with your request.
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Events held by other centres
Click on a name to visit the Events page of centres that occasionally host events related to policing, security
and peacebuilding:
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Calendar view – click here.
List view – click on a month to scroll the page to the relevant section:
Previous years' events – click on a year: 2008
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January 2009
Open workshop on diminishing conflicts in Asia and the Pacific
An event hosted by the ANU College of Asia
and the Pacific (CAP), the parent college of the CEPS ANU Program in Policing and Security.
From the Punjab to Aceh, from Bougainville to Pakistan, ethnic conflicts and insurgencies that once claimed many thousands
of lives every year have, over the last decade, seemed to decline in intensity. This public discussion aims to tease out some of the
explanations for what seems to be a broad regional trend, and to think about the exceptions.
More information is available from the ANU Billboard and ANU
CAP website.
Friday, 30th January: 9.00am – 10.30am.
Seminar Room, ground floor, Hedley Bull Centre, cnr Liversidge Street and Garran Road, ANU (reference D2 on the campus
map).
Seminar: ‘Conservation criminology and electronic waste: Exploring opportunities for collaboration’
CEPS Visiting Scholar Assistant Professor
Carole Gibbs, School of Criminal Justice, Department of Fisheries and Wildlife Studies, Michigan State University.
Professor Gibbs will be presenting on a general research/education program called ‘Conservation Criminology’, that is being developed
at MSU, as well as one of her research projects on international shipments of electronic waste. Her main goal is to explore opportunities
for collaboration.
Friday, 30th January: 12.30pm – 1.30pm (sandwich lunch available from 12.15pm).
Seminar Room C, 3rd floor, H. C. Coombs Building, Fellows Road, ANU (reference D2 on the campus
map).
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February 2009
Seminar: ‘The Canadian Observatory: An international research network on justice system responses to intimate partner
violence’
CEPS visitor Dr Carmen Gill, Director of the Muriel
McQueen Fergusson Centre for Family Violence Research (MMFC), University of New Brunswick,
and Principal Investigator of The Canadian Observatory.
The Canadian Observatory is a 4-year program of research networked across eight international sites (including two in Australia)
examining specialist justice system responses to intimate partner violence. Dr Gill will talk about how the Observatory works and
what it aims to achieve.
Monday, 9th February: 12.30 – 1.30pm (sandwich lunch available from 12.15pm).
Seminar Room 1.04, ground floor, H.C. Coombs Building Extension, Fellows Road, ANU (reference D2 on the campus
map).
Seminar: ‘Peace processes and prospects in West Papua and Aceh: A comparative assessment’
An event hosted by the Regulatory Institutions
Network (RegNet), the parent institution of the CEPS ANU Program in Policing and Security.
Associate Professor Damien Kingsbury,
School of International and Political Studies, Deakin University.
During the 2004 presidential election campaign, the successful presidential aspirant, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, said that resolving
the three-decade-long separatist conflict in Aceh was one of his priorities. The war had to be ended to prove that Indonesia was
indeed a viable state as constituted, that it was able to find political solutions to political problems, and because it needed to demilitarise
the state, including reducing the military's role in business and criminal activities along with its political influence. A political resolution
to this war was achieved 11 months after Yudhoyono took office. This political solution incorporated many elements of a previous
declaration of ‘special autonomy’ for Aceh, but took them further, particularly around local decision making on local affairs.
Despite some problems, to date this peace agreement has held.
Despite at the same time having declared ‘special autonomy’ for Indonesia's other troubled province of Papua, there has been no
similar subsequent political resolution to separatist claims there. Despite a call from the Papuan separatist umbrella organisation
for such a resolution, there has been no government expression of interest in doing so. This paper assesses both the parallels and differences
between the options for a political resolution in Papua. It then considers possible steps towards a finalisation of claims that address the
needs of both the Indonesian government and the indigenous people of Papua, and whether such an approach could be incorporated as a policy
position into the 2009 Indonesian elections.
Tuesday, 17th February: 12.30 – 1.30pm (sandwich lunch available from 12.15pm).
Seminar Room 1.04, ground floor, H.C. Coombs Building Extension, Fellows Road, ANU (reference D2 on the campus map).
Seminar: ‘Combatants to contractors: the political economy of peace in Aceh’
Dr Edward Aspinall, Senior Fellow, Indonesian Politics, Department
of Political and Social Change, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, ANU.
One of the least-frequently remarked-upon features of the peace process in Aceh is the economic transformation being experienced by
former combatants. Throughout Aceh, many former guerillas from GAM (the Free Aceh Movement) are becoming successful businesspeople.
Specifically, most are becoming contractors working in the construction industry, building infrastructure (especially roads, bridges, and
irrigation channels) or providing materials (sand, stones, and timber) for such work. They have entered one of the most politicized and corrupt
sectors of the Indonesian economy. Throughout the country, construction contracts are often awarded on the basis of political connections,
and large proportions of contract costs are lost to corruption. In Aceh, ex-GAM commanders are winning contracts funded by district development
budgets or as part of post-tsunami reconstruction. They succeed not because of their experience, skills or capacities in construction, but
because of their political influence and the intimidating muscle power of their followers. The Aceh experience thus throws light both on the
predatory arrangements that dominate provincial economic life in Indonesia, and on the role that corruption can play in peace processes.
Dr Aspinall is the author of Opposing Suharto: Compromise, Resistance and Regime Change in Indonesia (Stanford University Press,
2005) and Islam
and Nation: Separatist Rebellion in Aceh, Indonesia (Stanford University Press, 2009 (forthcoming)).
Tuesday 17th February: 3.00 – 4.30pm.
Political and Social Change Reading Room, room 4.27, level 4, Hedley Bull Centre, cnr Liversidge Street and Garran Road, ANU (reference D2 on the ANU campus map).
Seminar: ‘Only in Canada, eh? Restorative justice the Canadian way’
An initiative of CEPS industry partner, the Australian Institute of Criminology.
Ms Robin Vandekleut, of Restorative Justice Canada, will lead a discussion about the evolution and current state of restorative
justice in Canada, and the structures necessary to give restorative justice new application, both nationally and internationally.
Those interested in listening and contributing to future possibilities for restorative justice, nationally and internationally, are invited
to attend.
Visit the Australian Institute of Criminology Occasional Seminars page
for full details.
Monday 23rd February: 2.00pm – 3.00pm.
Australian Institute of Criminology, 74 Leichhardt Street, Griffith, ACT.
Schuman Lecture 2009: ‘The European Union's contribution to security in the 21st century’
Ms. Helga Schmid, Director of the Policy
and Early Warning Unit of the Council General Secretariat of the European Union.
For an Abstract of the presentation and a Biography for Ms. Schmid, download an event brochure (PDF,
68KB). This seminar forms part of a broad ‘Europe Update 2009’ (PDF, 366KB) program
of presentations by leading scholars and policy practitioners, which provides an overview of recent developments in the European Union
and the challenges facing EU-Australia relations.
Thursday 26th February: 12.00 – 1.00pm (RSVP by 10.00am Friday 20th February via europe@anu.edu.au).
Finkel Theatre, John Curtin School of Medical Research, Garran Road, ANU (reference C4 on the ANU
campus map).
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March 2009
Seminar: ‘Networked security: A case study of how state and non-state security actors interact at the sub-national
level in Indonesia’
David Jansen, Ph.D. Scholar, Department of Political and Social Change, ANU.
The security sector reform that began with the end of the Suharto era has led to a significant withdrawal of the Indonesian military
from the internal security sector. In an ironic break with their past, the Indonesian police (POLRI) have become the main element
of security management in Indonesian today. Despite this reality, the weight of scholarly interest in the Indonesian security sector has
been disproportionately allocated to the military, while interest in the much more practically significant Indonesian police has languished.
Another blind-spot in the analysis of the security sector in Indonesia has been our lack of focus on how security actors, both government
and non-government, interact. As the United States has learnt painfully to its own cost, we cannot have a debate about security until
we understand what American strategic thinkers call the “Interagency;” the area in which different actors jointly manage security.
This has been an area little touched in the case of Indonesia. What my research does is examine this issue at the meso/operational level,
looking at how security actors interact in a regional case study in Central Java.
Given the critical importance of POLRI to security management in Indonesia, this research analyses the security sector from the lens
of policing. In particular it applies theories of networked policing to the Indonesian case study.
In this seminar I will thus discuss the findings of my fieldwork in Indonesia. I will set out to answer the following questions:
who are the actors – state and non-state – in regional policing/security management? Are there workable boundaries of jurisdiction
between the various security actors? Does high institutional autonomy (or competition or other factors) hinder the ability of the
different actors to cooperate? If cooperation does exist between security actors, what is the reason for it?
Tuesday 3rd March: 3.00pm – 4.30pm.
Political and Social Change Reading Room, room 4.27, level 4, Hedley Bull Centre, cnr Liversidge Street and Garran Road, ANU (reference
D2 on the ANU campus map).
Seminar: ‘Regulatory Responses to the Cybercrime and Information Security Problem across the Taiwan Strait’
Lennon Yao-Chung Chang, Ph.D. Scholar, ARC Centre
of Excellence in Policing and Security, RegNet, ANU.
Thursday 5th March: 10.00 – 11.00am.
Seminar Room 1.04, ground floor, H.C. Coombs Building Extension, Fellows Road, ANU (reference D2 on the ANU
campus map).
Conference: ‘Making a Difference: Responding to Need in Developing, Implementing and Evaluating Correctional
Programs’
An initiative of CEPS industry partner, the Australian Institute of Criminology.
This international conference brings together policy makers, practitioners, researchers, academics and others with an interest
in correctional programs and services. The main objective of the conference will be to share current knowledge and directions in correctional
programming. There will be a strong emphasis on evidence-based outcomes of correctional programs and improving reintegration/re-entry
strategies. Key themes will be the rehabilitative needs of Indigenous offenders and young people, with a focus on developing programs, services
and evaluation methodologies that incorporate content and techniques specific to their needs.
Visit the Conference website for full details.
Thursday 5th – Friday 6th March.
Department of Justice, level 27, 121 Exhibition Street, Melbourne.
2009 CEPS Policing Symposium: ‘New Directions for Policing Serious and Complex Crime’
The 2009 CEPS Policing Symposium aims to meld some of the key issues emerging from the Executive
Session on Policing and Public Safety
held at Harvard University and currently convened in the United States, with issues relevant to the Australian and New Zealand policing
and security environments. The program seeks to inform Australian policing reform agendas. Speakers will address:
- Serious crime and national security threats,
- Innovative policing responses to serious and complex crime, and
- Cross-jurisdictional and international deployment issues
Visit the Symposium website for full details, and for access to selected speaker presentations.
Tuesday 10th – Wednesday 11th March.
Novotel Sydney Manly Pacific, Manly, NSW.
Workshop: ‘The Australia-Japan Security Relationship and New Regional Security Architectures: Opportunities and Obstacles’
The International Security component of the CEPS ANU Program in Policing and Security is hosting a workshop on the Australia-Japan
security relationship. The workshop is being sponsored by the Australia-Japan Foundation within the
Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, and attendance is BY INVITATION ONLY.
Tuesday 10th – Wednesday 11th March.
ANU Canberra campus.
Seminar: ‘The Challenge of Japan's Security: Can't Duality be Normal?’
Dr Donna Weeks, Lecturer
in Japanese Studies and International Relations at the Faculty
of Arts and Social Sciences at the University of the Sunshine Coast; Visiting Fellow in the
Centre for Governance and Public Policy at Griffith University
(January to June 2009); Visiting Fellow in the ARC Centre of Excellence in Policing and Security at The Australian National University (March 2009), working
with Professors William Tow and Rikki
Kersten.
Japanese ‘security’ is under scrutiny. Article 9 of its 1947 ‘peace’ constitution articulates definable
limits on its military capabilities. Yet, self-defence forces, usually in a humanitarian role, are now deployed to overseas operations.
During the Cold War, the idea of Japanese ‘security’ was characterised by tremendous economic growth, a US defence umbrella
and the so-called Yoshida Doctrine. In the post Cold War international security environment, much scholarship and commentary on
Japan has focused on Japan becoming ‘normal’ – a contestable notion.
Having established an economically secure role, the expectation grew that, in fact, Japan ought to be playing a stronger role militarily.
In this discussion, the key terms ‘security’ (anzen hosho in Japanese) and ‘defense’ (boei) are used quite distinctly,
at other times interchangeably. The first question this paper asks is whether or not we should pursue the difference between these
two terms when it comes to understanding Japanese security. And secondly, when it comes to Japan's perception of ‘security’,
does it have to choose one or the other? In the new security setting, can't the Japanese approach to security be ‘normal’?
Friday 13th March: 4.00pm – 5.30pm.
Political and Social Change Reading Room, room 4.27, level 4, Hedley Bull Centre, cnr Liversidge Street and Garran Road, ANU (reference
D2 on the ANU campus map).
Seminar: ‘Clear Thinking about National Security: Why is it so Hard?’
Professor Hugh White, Head of the Strategic and Defence Studies Centre at The Australian National University and Visiting Fellow at the Lowy Institute for International Policy. This lecture is presented by ANU Strategic and Defence Studies Centre and Canberra Skeptics.
We often behave as if national security is too important to think clearly about. Some risks are ignored, while others are exaggerated. Policies are adopted to meet threats without any clear idea of what exactly the threat is, how serious it might be, and how it could most cost-effectively be addressed. Major decisions are made on the most slender of bases: invading Iraq, rebuilding Afghanistan, toughening terrorism laws, buying battleships, have all been undertaken without due diligence by Governments, and the public seems hardly to expect any better. Yet it should be possible to think clearly about national
security and defence questions, applying to them the same standards of evidence, argument and diligence that we would expect in other areas of public policy.
In this lecture, Professor White will explore some recent examples of unclear thinking about national security in Australia, attempt to explain why such lapses from common standards of rationality are so common, and suggest some ways we could do better. Along the way Professor White will talk about terrorism, bird flu, global warming and the rise of China.
Friday 13th March: 6.00pm – 7.30pm. A dinner will follow the lecture.
Lecture Theatre 2, Manning Clarke Centre, Building 26a, Union Court (reference G3 on the ANU
campus map).
For more information and to register attendance for the dinner please contact Canberra Skeptics on
0408 430 442.
Book Launch: ‘Lengthening the Arm of the Law: Enhancing Law Enforcement Resources in the 21st Century’
It is with great pleasure that we at the ARC Centre of Excellence in Policing and Security announce the launch of our latest
book, Lengthening the Arm of the Law: Enhancing Law Enforcement Resources in the 21st Century, just published by
Cambridge University Press. The book is co-authored by
Ms Julie Ayling and Professor
Peter Grabosky of The Australian National University, Canberra, and Professor Clifford
Shearing of the University of Cape Town, and is one of the first products from our new ARC Centre of Excellence in Policing and Security.
Based on research conducted in cooperation with our industry partners, the Australian Federal Police and Victoria Police, and with
input from the New South Wales Police, the book explores ways in which the capacity of law enforcement agencies can be enhanced,
without jeopardising fundamental values such as accountability and equity in the delivery of policing services.
The book has already attracted international attention; the Chief Executive of the (UK) National Policing Improvement Agency,
Chief Constable Peter Neyroud, has written the preface.
The book will be launched by
The
Honourable (Bob) Robert John Debus MP, Minister for Home Affairs. Following the launch, copies of the book will be available for
purchase and morning tea will be provided.
Monday 16th March: 9.45am for 10.00am – 11.30am.
Foyer, H. C. Coombs Building Extension, Fellows Road, ANU (reference D2 on the campus map).
For catering purposes, please RSVP to ceps@anu.edu.au by
c.o.b. Tuesday 10th March.
Working Lunch: Illicit Organisations Project
The Illicit Organisations Project of the CEPS ANU Program in Policing and Security will hold another working lunch similar
to the one held in December
2008, for interested individuals to contribute to the project. The discussion panel will include international visitors Michael
Stohl (Professor and Chair of the Department of Communication at the University of California, Santa Barbara) and
Benoît Dupont (Deputy Director
of the International Centre for Comparative Criminology at the University of Montreal). Details of the discussion hypotheses will
be emailed to those who confirm their attendance.
Tuesday 17th March: 12.00pm – 2.00pm (sandwich lunch available from 12.15pm).
Seminar Room 1.13, ground floor, H. C. Coombs Building Extension, Fellows Road, ANU (reference D2 on the campus
map).
For catering purposes, please RSVP to ceps@anu.edu.au by
c.o.b. Tuesday 10th March.
Seminar: ‘Security Networks and Emergent Effects: Reconsidering the Coordination, Evaluation and Regulation of Security
Provision’
CEPS Visiting Fellow and Partner Investigator, Professor Benoît Dupont,
Deputy Director of the International Centre for Comparative Criminology (CICC) at the University
of Montreal.
The most recent developments in the study of the governance of security involve conceptual frameworks that seek to interpret
the plural nature of security delivery and the proliferation of public-private partnerships, in what has traditionally been perceived
as the exclusive realm of state sovereignty. Such theoretical innovations include the nodal governance framework advocated by Clifford Shearing
and Jennifer Wood, the idea of anchored pluralism promoted by Ian Loader and Neil Walker, or the exchange theory developed by Julie
Ayling, Peter Grabosky and Clifford Shearing in their latest book. In this seminar, Professor Dupont will adopt a bottom-up approach and
present the results of a research project whose main objective was to map the structure of an urban security network and the interactions
of its nodes. After having briefly introduced the features of the network, Professor Dupont will examine the rationalities at work and the
emergent effects that result from this complex web of interactions. These emergent effects are predominantly linked to uncertainty, knowledge
and trust. Professor Dupont will conclude this presentation by suggesting that some radical adjustments need to be made to existing security
coordination, evaluation and regulation mechanisms if they are to maintain their relevance in the current environment.
Friday 20th March: 12.30pm – 1.30pm (sandwich lunch available from 12.15pm).
Seminar Room 1.04, ground floor, H.C. Coombs Building Extension, Fellows Road, ANU (reference D2 on the ANU
campus map).
For catering purposes, please RSVP to ceps@anu.edu.au by
c.o.b. Friday 13 March.
Seminar: ‘Antagonism, Regionalism and Cross-Border Cooperation Against Crime and Terrorism’
Professor Sandy Gordon, ARC Centre of Excellence in Policing and Security.
Tuesday 24th March: 12.30pm – 1.30pm (sandwich lunch available from 12.15pm).
Seminar Room 1.04, ground floor, H.C. Coombs Building Extension, Fellows Road, ANU (reference D2 on the ANU
campus map).
Seminar: ‘Post-conflict state-formation in Africa: The role of traditional leadership in reconstituting state and governance
in Somaliland’
Ms Louise Wiuff Moe, recent graduate of a Master of Arts in International Studies at the University
of Stellenbosch (South Africa). Ms Wiuff Moe studied under an exchange agreement with the International
Peace Research Institute, Oslo (PRIO) (Norway). Her studies focused on political economy and conflict dynamics in sub-Saharan Africa,
and she conducted fieldwork in Somaliland from mid-January to mid-May 2008. Ms Wiuff Moe also has a close association with the Academy
for Peace and Development (APD), a Hargeisa-based research institute.
Ms Wiuff Moe will discuss the roles of traditional authorities in undertaking key governance functions in the case of post-conflict
Somaliland. This case of emerging statehood is first and foremost presented as an impressive indigenous alternative to externally-driven,
top-down attempts to revive centralised statehood. As for limitations, it is apparent that the conversion of power between the
traditional authorities and the state profoundly transforms – and potentially has the risk of undermining – the basis of legitimacy
and authority for both.
Friday 27th March: 11.00am – 12.00pm.
Meeting Room 3.17, level 3, H.C. Coombs Building Extension, Fellows Road, ANU (reference D2 on the ANU
campus map).
Please register your interest with Dr
Susan Harris Rimmer, Centre for International Justice and Governance, Regulatory Institutions Network (RegNet), ANU.
Seminar: ‘Maritime Security Compliance and the Governance of Partnerships’
Russell Brewer, Ph.D. Scholar, ARC Centre of
Excellence in Policing and Security, RegNet, ANU.
Tuesday 31st March: 12.30pm – 1.30pm (sandwich lunch available from 12.15pm).
Seminar Room 1.04, ground floor, H.C. Coombs Building Extension, Fellows Road, ANU (reference D2 on the ANU
campus map).
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April 2009
Conference: ‘Crossing Borders: Promoting Regional Law Enforcement Cooperation – European, Australian and
Asia-Pacific Perspectives’
An initiative supported by CEPS in conjunction with The Research Network
for a Secure Australia (RNSA), hosted by the
National Europe Centre, Research School of Humanities, ANU.
This international conference brings together academics, public policy and legal practitioners, and law enforcement officials
from Europe, Australia and the Asian-Pacific region, to review and discuss the pressing problems impeding cross-border policing and
law enforcement. The conference will provide opportunities to review common problems and to explore innovative solutions from around the
world.
Details are available from the conference
website and the conference brochure. Conference presenters are exempt from paying registration
fees (although they must register in order to provide their details to the conference organisers).
Wednesday 8th – Thursday 9th April.
Finkel Theatre, The John Curtin School of Medical Research, Garran Road, ANU (reference C4 on the ANU
campus map), and
Sparke Helmore Theatres 1 and 2, ANU College of Law, Fellows Road, ANU (reference E3 on the ANU
campus map).
Seminar: ‘Geopolitics and Maritime Disputes in the South China Sea: from Competition to Cooperation?’
CEPS Visiting Fellow, Associate Professor Ralf
Emmers, Head of Graduate Studies, S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS), Nanyang
Technological University, Singapore.
Biography:
Dr Ralf Emmers is Associate Professor and Head of Graduate Studies at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS),
Nanyang Technological University (NTU), Singapore. He completed his MSc and PhD in the Department of International Relations at
the London School of Economics (LSE). His research interests cover security studies and international relations theory, maritime
security, international institutions in the Asia-Pacific, and the security and international politics of Southeast Asia.
Abstract:
Professor Emmers' presentation will examine the geopolitics of the maritime territorial disputes in the South China Sea. He will
look in detail at the Paracel Islands claimed by China, Taiwan, and Vietnam and the Spratly Islands involving Brunei, China, Malaysia,
the Philippines, Taiwan, and Vietnam. Professor Emmers will argue that the territorial disputes in the South China Sea are influenced by three
primary geopolitical considerations: the quest for territoriality and natural resources, as well as power competition, all impact
on the disputes and broader regional relations. It is precisely the interplay of these geopolitical forces that can lead to a rapid escalation
in the South China Sea or, reversely, to a diffusion of tensions. The presentation will also consider how the disputes in the South China
Sea might be managed, and even resolved peacefully, despite the geopolitical conditions that make effective cooperation on these issues difficult
to achieve. The prospect for conflict management and resolution will be analysed by identifying catalysts that might contribute to improving
the climate of relations.
Thursday 9th April: 1.30 – 3.00pm.
Asia Pacific College of Diplomacy (APCD) Lecture Theatre, ground floor, Hedley Bull Centre, cnr Liversidge Street and Garran Road,
ANU (reference D2 on the ANU campus map).
For enquiries please contact Dr Nicole George on tel. (02) 6125 0410 or email Nicole.George@anu.edu.au.
Listen to Professor Emmers' presentation » (MP3 29.7MB 01:41:39)
Seminar: ‘The use of Innovative Communication Technologies by Police and other Law Enforcement Agencies’
An event hosted by the Australian Institute of Criminology (AIC), a CEPS industry
partner.
AIC visitor, Frans-Jan Mulschlegel, is a Project Manager for the International Police Expertise
Platform (IPEP) – an international platform for police officers world-wide to exchange knowledge and experiences without the
boundaries of time and place. In this seminar, Mr. Mulschlegel will draw on his extensive experience in web-based information to
explore existing services and future possibilities in technological innovations.
Full details are available from the AIC website.
Wednesday 15th April: 10.30am – 12.30pm (a light lunch will be served at the end of the presentation).
Australian Institute of Criminology, 74 Leichhardt Street, Griffith, ACT.
Seminar: ‘Co-op Dividend: The Factors Affecting Successful Law Enforcement Cooperation’
CEPS Visiting Scholar, Mr
Steven Brown, a qualified barrister who left the Bar to become a Metropolitan Police Officer in London.
Abstract:
According to Roger Gaspar (2008), we are entering a third era of policing that has evolved in response to the needs of a modern society
characterised by globalisation and mobility. As a consequence, law enforcement strategies demand closer cross-border cooperation
and a smarter infrastructure for information handling. In many places these attributes are at best asymmetric and, at worse, significantly
lacking. Drawing on the experience of a non-federal Europe and on that of developing states, this seminar will explore the principle challenges
in building transnational law enforcement cooperation and propose some common factors for success.
Thursday 16th April: 12.30pm – 1.30pm (sandwich lunch available from 12.15pm).
Seminar Room 1.04, ground floor, H.C. Coombs Building Extension, Fellows Road, ANU (reference D2 on the ANU
campus map).
Seminar: ‘Criminal Organisations’
Mr Alastair Milroy will speak about his role as the CEPS Executive-in-Residence and
will give a presentation on criminal organisations, with specific examples including Outlaw Motorcycle Gangs.
Read Mr Milroy's biography » (PDF 45KB)
Monday 20th April: 12.30pm – 1.30pm (sandwich lunch available from 12.15pm).
Seminar Room 1.04, ground floor, H.C. Coombs Building Extension, Fellows Road, ANU (reference D2 on the ANU
campus map).
Please RSVP your attendance by emailing the CEPS Project Manager, Ms Tanya Mark
(Tanya.Mark@anu.edu.au)
for catering purposes.
Seminar: ‘Regulation and the Politics of Risk’
Associate Professor Fiona Haines, School of Social and
Political Sciences, University of Melbourne.
Tuesday 21st April: 12.30pm – 1.30pm (sandwich lunch available from 12.15pm).
Seminar Room 1.04, ground floor, H.C. Coombs Building Extension, Fellows Road, ANU (reference D2 on the ANU
campus map).
Seminar: ‘Organised Cybercrime and the Organisation of Crime Online’
CEPS Visiting Scholar, Professor David Wall, Centre for
Criminal Justice Studies, School of Law, University of Leeds.
Biography:
David S. Wall (BA, MA, M Phil, PhD, FRSA, AcSS) is Professor of Criminal Justice and Information Society at the University
of Leeds. Formerly Director of the Centre for Criminal Justice Studies (2000-2005) and Head of the School of Law (2005-2007), he
conducts research and teaches in the fields of criminal justice and information technology (Cybercrime), policing, cyberlaw and intellectual
property crime. He has published a wide range of articles and books on these subjects which include: Cybercrime: The Transformation of Crime
in the Information Age (Polity, 2007), Cyberspace Crime (ed. Ashgate/ Dartmouth, 2003), Crime and the Internet (ed. Routledge, 2001) and The
Internet, Law and Society (ed. with Y. Akdeniz and C. Walker, Longman, 2000). He has also published a range of books and articles within the
broader field of criminal justice, including Policy Networks in Criminal Justice (ed. with M. Ryan and S. Savage, McMillan Press, 2001), The
British Police: Forces and Chief Officers (with M. Stallion, Police History Society, 1999), The Chief Constables of England and Wales (Ashgate/Dartmouth,
1998), Access to Criminal Justice (ed. with R. Young, Blackstone Press, 1996), Policing in a Northern Force (with K. Bottomley, C.
Coleman, D. Dixon and M. Gill, Hull University, 1991).
Abstract:
The debate over the relationship between organised cybercrime and the internet continues to run. One of the key assumptions underpinning
it is that the internet is increasingly being used by traditional and non-traditional organised crime groups and some terrorist groups
to generate large amounts of income and in some situations further their own ends. The problem with the debate is that its participants tend
to simplify the relationship between organised crime and the internet in order to present it to the public with old stereotypes prevailing.
Furthermore, it is a debate that is largely normative and without much hard evidence put forward either to prove or disprove the
theories being pursued in the discussion. Yet, the arguments are culturally and intuitively powerful and can shape public demands for security,
the formation of policy and also the allocation of resources.
There are clearly some empirical challenges to unravelling the various issues in play which will need to be overcome if the debate
is to be taken forward. Before that, however, it will be argued in this paper that the various issues and tensions in the debates first need
to be mapped out, especially as a number of debates, such as those over organised cybercrime online and the organisation of crime online currently
are currently being confused. The debate over organised crime online is overshadowed by conceptualisations of organised crime in popular culture
(the Mafia command and control model). The debate over organisation of crime online has been framed by new tensions that are appearing in
new online business models between the 'old-fashioned' control and customer hacking (prosumption) model. This paper will disaggregate the
organised crime online debate from the debate over the organisation of crime online. It will argue that the two debates are separate but have
become intertwined. It will also argue that the organisation of crime online (true cybercrimes) does not lend itself to traditional command
and control models, if anything it opposes it. However, it will also be argued that there may be some possible overlap with certain types
of crime.
Part one of the paper will look at the debate over organised crime, part two at the debate over the organisation of crime online.
Part three will explore different types of crime organisation implicit in different types of crime online. Part four will conclude
and also identify some of the research questions that need to be answered in order to take this debate further.
Download the notes of Professor Wall's presentation »
(PDF 1.08MB).
Tuesday 28th April: 3.30pm – 4.30pm (afternoon tea available from 3.15pm).
Seminar Room 1.04, ground floor, H.C. Coombs Building Extension, Fellows Road, ANU (reference D2 on the ANU
campus map).
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May 2009
Seminar: ‘Community Policing and Crime Prevention in Practice: Lessons from a US Field Intervention’
CEPS Visiting Scholar, Dr Jeremy
M. Wilson, Associate Director for Research and an Associate Professor in the School of Criminal Justice at Michigan State University
(MSU).
Biography:
Dr Wilson recently founded and directs the MSU Anti-Counterfeiting and Product Protection Program and the Police Studies
Consortium. Prior to joining MSU, Dr Wilson was a Behavioural Scientist at the RAND Corporation, where, in addition to securing
and directing many influential law enforcement projects, he led the development of several successful initiatives, including the
Center on Quality Policing and the Police Recruitment and Retention Clearinghouse, the latter of which he still serves as Director.
He is a visiting scholar in the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence in Policing and Security, he recently held the Willett
Chair in Public Safety in the Center for Public Safety at Northwestern University, and was an adjunct professor of public policy
at Carnegie Mellon University. Dr Wilson has collaborated with police agencies, communities, task forces and governments throughout
the U.S. and the world on many of the most salient public safety problems. His recent books include Police Recruitment and Retention
in the Contemporary Urban Environment: Personnel Experiences and Promising Practices from the Front Lines, Recruitment and Retention: Lessons
for the New Orleans Police Department, Human Trafficking in Ohio, Securing America’s Passenger-Rail Systems, Community Policing and Crime:
The Process and Impact of Problem-solving in Oakland., Community Policing and Violence Prevention in Oakland, Community Policing in America,
Police-Community Relations in Cincinnati, State and Local Intelligence in the War on Terrorism, and Establishing Law and Order After Conflict.
His research and commentary have also been featured in numerous professional journals and in various forms of national and international media.
Dr Wilson received his PhD in Public Administration from The Ohio State University.
Abstract:
In response to rising crime and violence, Oakland, California voters passed Measure Y, the Violence Prevention and Public
Safety Act of 2004, a 10-year initiative supported by a nearly $20M annual investment designed to foster violence prevention through
community policing and social service programs. This seminar highlights the progress of the community-policing component of Measure Y over
its first three years. In particular, it presents the process of implementation as well as offers evidence of an impact. Although progress
has been made, significant obstacles challenged the implementation of the community-policing program, thereby illustrating that evidence-based
strategies and resources are not enough. These obstacles are discussed in light of offering lessons about improving this and similar types
of field interventions.
Wednesday 27th May: 12.30pm – 1.30pm (sandwich lunch available from 12.15pm). RSVP (for catering purposes) to ceps@anu.edu.au.
Lecture Room 3, ground floor, Hedley Bull Centre, cnr Liversidge Street and Garran Road, ANU (reference D2 on the campus
map).
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June 2009
Seminar: ‘Islamist Extremism in Indonesia – Implications and the Road Ahead’
CEPS Visiting Fellow, Dr Bilveer Singh, Associate Professor in
the Department of Political Science, National University of Singapore.
Biography:
Dr Bilveer Singh is Associate Professor at the Department
of Political Science of the National University of Singapore. He is also the Vice President of the Political
Science Association in Singapore and the Deputy National Coordinator of the Southeast
Asian Conflict Studies Network (SEASCN). Dr Singh’s research interests are in International Relations and Comparative Politics. He teaches
Government of Politics of Singapore; Singapore's Foreign Policy; International Security; and Contemporary Issues in Indonesian Politics.
To date, he has authored nine books which include the following recent major publications: Indonesia in the Shadows
of an Islamic State (co-authored with Munir Mulkhan, forthcoming); Papua:
Geopolitics and Papua’s Quest for Nationhood (New Jersey: Transaction Publishers, 2008); The
Talibanziation of Southeast Asia: Losing the War on Terror to Islamist Extremists (Boulder: Praeger Security International,
2007);
Politics and Governance in Singapore:
An Introduction (Singapore: McGrawHill Education, 2007); ASEAN, Australian and the Management of the Jemaah Islamiyyah Threat (Canberra:
Strategic and Defence Studies Centre, 2003).
Abstract:
Since the Bali bombings in October 2002, Indonesia has been placed on the international radar screen as one of the areas of concern
as far as Islamist terrorism is concerned. The fact that this was followed by a series of bombings as well as the evident presence
of the Al Jemaah Al Islammiyah (AJAI), the most dangerous region-based terrorist organisation, tends to confirm the view that Southeast Asia
has emerged as the 'second front' in the global war on terror. As the largest Muslim state in the world, and the presence of various radical
Islamist groups, much has been said and written about the issue. The talk will attempt to review the main discourse on the issue,
the strength of AJAI as well as the state of play as far as the Islamists are concerned. The fact that Islamic political parties fared badly
in the 2009 general elections in Indonesia implied something – that the public has largely rejected them – yet, what does this
mean for the Islamists as a whole? Who are the main groups and what are the likely courses of action will be briefly examined. What is the
future for the Islamists and is Indonesia in danger of being taken over by these groups?
Thursday 4th June: 1.30pm – 3.00pm.
Lecture Room 3, ground floor, Hedley Bull Centre, cnr Liversidge Street and Garran Road, ANU (reference D2 on the
campus map).
RegNet Bookclub: ‘Lengthening the Arm of the Law: Enhancing Police Resources in the 21st Century’
The book Lengthening the Arm of the Law: Enhancing Law Enforcement Resources in the 21st Century (Cambridge University
Press: 2009) was launched by The Honourable Bob Debus MP, Minister for Home Affairs, in March 2009 (see
launch details).
The Regulatory Institutions Network (RegNet) at the ANU College of Asia and the Pacific will host a discussion of the book, featuring
the book's CEPS-based authors, Ms Julie Ayling and Professor Peter Grabosky, in conversation with Associate Professor Clive Harfield
of the Law Faculty, University of Wollongong, and Professor Rod Broadhurst, Associate Investigator at CEPS, ANU.
Download an invitation to the Bookclub » (PDF 76KB)
Tuesday 9th June: 12.30pm – approx. 1.30pm (lunch available from 12.15pm). RSVP (for catering purposes) to
regnet@anu.edu.au.
Seating is strictly limited and all participants need to register by 4th June 2009 to ensure a seat.
Seminar Room 1.04, ground floor, H.C. Coombs Building Extension, Fellows Road, ANU (reference D2 on the ANU
campus map).
Asian Security Seminar Series: ‘Australia and Japan: Going Global’
Dr Malcolm Cook,
Program Director, East Asia at the Lowy Institute for International Policy,
Sydney.
Biography:
Dr Malcolm Cook is Program Director of East Asia at the Lowy Institute for International Policy. He completed a PhD in International
Relations at The Australian National University. He holds a Masters degree in International Relations from the International University
of Japan and an honours degree from McGill University in Canada, his country of birth. Before moving to Australia in 2000, Dr Cook
lived and worked in the Philippines, South Korea and Japan and spent much time in Singapore and Malaysia. Before joining the Lowy
Institute in November 2003, he ran his own consulting practice on East Asian political and economic policy reform and risk analysis.
He is the author of Banking Reform in Southeast Asia (Routledge, 2008) in addition to numerous op-ed pieces, academic journal
articles and policy reports.
Summary:
In this seminar, Dr Cook proposes a new agenda for multilateral cooperation between Australia and Japan. The ANU and Lowy Institute
for International Policy, both recipients of Australia-Japan Foundation support, are collaborating on their respective
projects by bringing Dr Malcom Cook to the ANU to present some of the preliminary findings of their project and to compare their
findings to date, with each other.
The Asian Security seminar series is a joint initiative between the Department of International Relations
and the Strategic and Defence Studies Centre
at the ANU. This seminar is supported by the
Australia-Japan Foundation, Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade.

Download a flyer for this seminar » (PDF 50KB)
Read more about the CEPS-AJF partnership »
Friday 19th June: 2.00 – 3.30pm. Enquiries: Dr Brendan Taylor (ph 02 6125 9928 or email
Brendan.Taylor@anu.edu.au).
Lecture Theatre 2 (room 1.09), ground floor, Hedley Bull Centre, cnr Liversidge Street and Garran Road, ANU (reference D2 on the
campus map).
Seminar: ‘Accountability in State Building Interventions’
An event hosted jointly by the Peace Research Network at the ANU Centre of International Governance
and Justice, RegNet and the ANU Department of International Relations.
Ms Iris Wielders, PhD Candidate in the ANU Department of International Relations.
Biography:
Iris Wielders (BA/MA International Relations, University of Amsterdam; MA International Humanitarian Assistance, University of
Groningen) is a PhD Candidate in the Department of International Relations at The Australian National University. Her PhD project
investigates accountability dilemmas in international cooperative state building interventions. She has worked in conflict prevention
and peace building in Solomon Islands, Fiji and the Pacific region more broadly. She combines her PhD studies with work in conflict-sensitive
development; linkages between land and conflict; peace building; and modalities of aid and intervention in conflict affected/fragile
states.
Abstract:
Questions surrounding the effectiveness and legitimacy of state building interventions are forming a growing global research agenda.
Apart from a small number of transitional administrations, most state building interventions take the form of extensive longer-term
state building partnerships between external actors and governments – they are 'cooperative state building interventions'. This partnership
model has been criticised for its lack of transparency in terms of power relations and responsibilities, with claims that the partnership
model is a deliberate attempt to escape accountability for aid policies. However, the question of how accountability can be constituted
in these cooperative state building interventions remains under-investigated.
Cooperative state building interventions are neither actual institutions of global governance nor ordinary development assistance programs, complicating
the question how accountability can be constituted in such interventions. Accountability mechanisms in these interventions cannot simply draw
on existing accountability models in global governance institutions, and their constitution as comprehensive long-term partnerships with governments
calls for more than conventional aid monitoring and evaluation to constitute accountability. In addition, the concept of accountability is itself
contested. This paper investigates these complexities and suggests that the question of how accountability should be constituted in cooperative
state building interventions involves the negotiation of a number of dilemmas.
Download a flyer for this seminar » (PDF 31KB)
Tuesday 23rd June: 12.30pm – 1.30pm (sandwich lunch available from 12.15pm).
Seminar Room 1.04, ground floor, H.C. Coombs Building Extension, Fellows Road, ANU (reference D2 on the ANU
campus map).
Seminar: ‘Community Justice and Policing in Timor-Leste’
An event hosted by the ANU Centre for International
Governance & Justice (CIGJ), a CEPS-affiliated institution.
Mr Silas Everett, Representative, The Asia Foundation,
Timor-Leste, and
Mr Thomas Parks, Regional Conflict and Governance Advisor,
The Asia Foundation, Thailand.
Summary:
Mr Everett and Mr Parks will speak about The Asia Foundation's access to justice programs and community policing programs
in Timor-Leste, in particular about empirical evidence TAF has gathered through perception surveys on policing, and law and justice in Timor-Leste.
Background:
As a country in transition from conflict to stability, Timor-Leste faces many challenges in ensuring access to justice for all.
Many individuals' attempts to exercise fundamental rights through traditional dispute resolution mechanisms or through the nascent
formal justice sector often fail due to limited financial resources, low awareness of options, and geographic isolation. The
Asia Foundation, through the USAID-funded Access to Justice program, aims to bridge those gaps for vulnerable groups by funding
pro bono legal aid services, supporting enhanced mediation services, increasing expertise to meet the particular justice needs of
women, and increasing awareness of laws and legal procedures vital to secure livelihoods for vulnerable groups.
Still less than ten years old, the Timor-Leste National Police force (PNTL) continues to face a range of challenges. At its inception,
only one in ten officers of the 3,000-strong PNTL had previous policing experience. Since then, considerable assistance has been
provided for training police officers, developing policy, and reworking the structure of state security institutions. Although
vital, these technical efforts have not incorporated community-level and civil society actors, and much less attention has focused
on assisting ‘community-police’ relations.
Experience has proven that technical assistance to police alone is insufficient for improving security, and that it is also essential
to develop a set of community-oriented norms and practices for the conduct of policing functions. However, while the PNTL is
committed to working in a community-oriented manner, it lacks both the material and the means to do so.
Friday 26th June: 2.30pm – 4.00pm.
Seminar Room 1.13, ground floor, H.C. Coombs Building Extension, Fellows Road, ANU (reference D2 on the ANU
campus map).
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July 2009
Seminar: ‘Framing Innocents: The Wrongly Convicted as Victims of State Harm’
CEPS/RegNet visitor, Professor Kimberly J. Cook, Chair
and Professor of Sociology and Criminology, University of North Carolina Wilmington.
Abstract1:
The state crime literature has yet to consider how state officials exercise
power to investigate, prosecute, and convict innocent people of crimes they did not commit. We adapt the victimology
'state harms' framework advocated by Kauzlarich, Matthews and Miller (2001)2 to examine the
post-exoneration experiences of 18 death row exonerees. The 'state harms' approach offered by Kauzlarich et al. more fully
captures the human injuries endured by state crime victims, including death row exonerees, than the traditional legalistic
and social harms approaches used to study state crime. Using the state harms framework, we discuss the array of traumas
exonerees face as a result of their wrongful capital convictions and incarcerations, challenges exacerbated by their quest
for state accountability. We conclude with a discussion of the value of using the state harms approach to understand the
post-exoneration experiences of exonerees.
Notes:
1. Research conducted by Kimberly J. Cook and Saundra Westervelt.
2. Kauzlarich, David, Rick A. Matthews & William J. Miller, 'Toward a Victimology of State Crime, 'Critical Criminology, 10:173–194,
2001.
The authors anticipate that a paper will be published on this work in the near future. Electronic copies will be provided on request
via
ceps@anu.edu.au.
Thursday 9th July: 12.30pm – 1.30pm (sandwich lunch available from 12.15pm). RSVP (for catering purposes) to
ceps@anu.edu.au.
Seminar Room 1.04, ground floor, H.C. Coombs Building Extension, Fellows Road, ANU (reference D2 on the ANU
campus map).
Seminar: ‘The Economic-Security Nexus and East Asian Regionalism’
This lecture is part of the 'Asian Security seminar series', a joint initiative between CEPS at the Department of International Relations and the Strategic
and Defence Studies Centre, ANU College of Asia and the Pacific, The Australian National University.
CEPS Visiting Scholar, T.J. Pempel, Professor of Political Science, Charles and Louise Travers
Department of Political Science, UC Berkeley.
Biography:
Professor Pempel is renowned for his extensive work in the field of International Political Economy. His research focuses on comparative
politics, Japanese political economy, and Asian regionalism. His most recent books include
'Crisis as Catalyst: Asia’s Dynamic Political Economy'
(Cornell University Press, 2008), 'Remapping East Asia: The Construction of a Region' (Cornell University
Press, 2005), and 'Beyond Bilateralism: U.S.-Japan Relations in the New Asia-Pacific'
(Stanford University Press, 2004).
Abstract:
East Asia is becoming more regionalised. But it is doing so in fits and starts: two steps forward and one step back. At present,
few Asian governments are bonded through an overarching regional vision; many are highly distrustful of one another; and the region
evinces little of the sustained political leadership and conviction necessary to create the robust institutions that might deepen
and regularise state-to-state cooperation across a range of complex issues. Yet even with its many halts and missteps, Asia has,
beyond question, become a far more institutionally cohesive neighbourhood than it was one or two decades ago.
Commercial integration has been a powerful force in eroding some of Asia's walls of national insulation as cross-border production
networks have forged a series of regional bridges leavening previously tight national economic boundaries and weaving a latticework
of economic connections across large swaths of the region.
Economic globalisation has undoubtedly facilitated integration of large parts of the region. Nevertheless, particularly within
East Asia, national governments have remained the ultimate repositories of power and the primary building blocks in international
affairs. Territoriality and national governmental priorities continue to trump the forces of globalised economics. Regional governance
continues to lag behind burgeoning corporate linkages. Nevertheless, East Asia’s national governments, as they seek to mediate the extremes
of economic globalisation and to search for solutions to the growing number of intra-regional problems that defy solution by any
single government, have come increasingly to define their self-interest as lying in greater cross-border cooperation through formal
regional institutions. As a consequence, across the region, regional institutions have become increasingly utilised tools in the
kits of still-sovereign governments.
Strikingly, even as regional ties have become more institutionalised, a marked imbalance continues between the steadily deepening
connections in economics and finance and the much less robust bodies shaping events in the traditional security realm. To many
who focus on security tensions, East Asian conditions suggest a region that, in the words of Aaron Friedberg (1993) is "ripe for
rivalry." In
contrast, however, economic linkages suggest a region "ripe for cooperation."
In this lecture, Professor Pempel will explore the nexus among rising regionalism, economic cooperation and security tensions.
Key concerns will be the extent to which cooperation (or tensions) in one area spill over to others, making regional cooperation either
easier or more problematic.
Thursday 30th July 2009: 1.30pm – 3.00pm. No RSVP required.
Asia Pacific College of Diplomacy (APCD) Lecture Theatre, ground floor, Hedley Bull Centre, cnr Liversidge Street and Garran Road,
ANU (reference D2 on the ANU campus map).
For enquiries please contact Dr Brendan Taylor, T: 6125.9928, E:
brendan.taylor@anu.edu.au.
Listen to a podcast of this seminar » (29.4MB
01:29:52)
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August 2009
Conference: ‘The 2009 eCrime Symposium’
Hosted by the Internet Safety Institute,
Slattery IT and conference advisors Nigel Phair (CEPS Associate Investigator and member of the Asia Pacific Civil-Military
Centre of Excellence) and Alastair MacGibbon (Trust and Safety Director, eBay Australia and New Zealand).
A one-day symposium in which key security experts will gather to discuss the impact of emerging threats for businesses operating
online. Topics covered will include privacy and information protection, corporate responsibility, reputation and brand, emerging
threats to online security, how to protect critical data as social media intersects with people's personal lives, and the latest
developments in technology to fight e-crime.
Visit the symposium homepage »
Tuesday 4th August: 9.00am – 6.00pm.
Sofitel Wentworth Sydney, 61-101 Phillip Street, Sydney.
Conference: ‘Safeguarding Australia 2009’
The 8th national conference and forum on security and resilience is hosted by Safeguarding Australia, and is partially supported by CEPS.
The conference will be relevant to those in the fields of national security strategy and policy; counter terrorism in an all-hazards environment;
resilience; critical infrastructure protection; business continuity; and enterprise security, risk and safety.
A PhD
National Security Workshop will take place on the first day of this conference. The PhD workshop is organised by the
Research Network for a Secure Australia (RNSA), which
is a multidisciplinary collaboration focused on strengthening Australia's research capacity for protecting critical infrastructure
from natural or human-caused disasters, including terrorist acts. The PhD workshop aims to continue previous efforts by the RNSA
to build a network of PhD researchers and match PhD researchers with national security staff who may be interested in their work.
For more
information visit the conference website »
Wednesday 5th – Thursday 6th August.
Rydges Lakeside, Canberra, 1 London Circuit, Canberra City, ACT.
Seminar: ‘The roar on the other side of silence: A pre-fieldwork presentation for a multi-country research on sexual
violence in conflict/post-conflict situation’
PhD scholar, Ms
Joyce Wu of the Centre for International Governance & Justice (CIGJ),
Regulatory Institutions Network (RegNet), ANU.
Biography:
Gender equality and the elimination of violence against women are issues which Joyce cares deeply about. Prior to undertaking
postgraduate studies, Joyce worked in agencies including the Australian Agency for International Development (AusAID), the East and Southeast Asia regional
office and China country office of the United Nations Development Fund for
Women (UNIFEM), and the Australian Government Office for Women. Her PhD research is
a multi-country study aimed at identifying good practices on engaging with men and boys to prevent sexual violence in conflict
and post-conflict situations. The project also examines how the emerging trends of militarisation and privatisation of humanitarian
aid have affected aid agencies' efforts to address sexual and gender-based violence, and the promotion of gender equality and
women's human rights.
Abstract:
In recent years sexual violence during conflict and post-conflict periods, fuelled by the gendered dimension
of armed conflict and the use of rape as a form of military strategy, has been receiving global attention. However, there have
been few multi-country studies done which identify and compare the challenges, common themes, and good practices on prevention
and intervention strategies in sexual and gender-based violence. In response, this PhD research will be a multi-country study
conducted in Afghanistan, East Timor and Pakistan. The pre-fieldwork seminar will examine how the emerging patterns of conflict
and peace reconstruction have affected the ways in which the international communities respond to this issue, the construction
of gender identities during conflict situations, and the strategic value of engaging men in gender-based violence prevention
activities within post-conflict settings.
Analysis will be undertaken on the impact of the "fast aid" approach to post-conflict reconstruction, where development projects are reduced
to technocratic transfer without giving account to local specificities, the militarisation of humanitarian aid, and the challenge
of working with men and boys on anti-violence prevention in ways which ensure the safety of women and project participants within
a conflict/post-conflict setting. In addition, research methodology for fieldwork – from logistics to interview techniques – will
be raised for discussion. This research project is supported by the Australian Government (Endeavour Research Fellowship), Oxfam and
the Australian Red Cross.
Tuesday 11th August: 12.30pm – 1.30pm (sandwich lunch available from 12.15pm). RSVP (for catering purposes) to
ceps@anu.edu.au.
Seminar Room 1.04, ground floor, H.C. Coombs Building Extension, Fellows Road, ANU (reference D2 on the ANU
campus map).
Seminar: ‘Organised crime in contemporary China: Fictional anecdote or factual existence?’
CEPS Visiting Scholar, Professor Jianming Mei, Chinese People’s Public Security University, Beijing, China.
Biography:
Download a CV for Professor Mei » (PDF 59KB)
Abstract:
English literature about organised crime in China usually reviews Triad in earlier centuries, and sometime explores variants in the
contemporary time, whereas Chinese literature about organised crime mostly uses terms like Mafia-like organisational crime or underground-society
crime. Similarly, Chinese law-makers also resonate with the Chinese academic community. Their discourse implies that there is no
organised crime in contemporary China. In practice, Chinese police launches campaigns to crack down Mafia-like organisational crime.
The differences between the discourse in English and Chinese literature highlight some controversial questions: Is there organised
crime in contemporary China? Is Mafia-like organisational crime a euphemism for organised crime? If not, what are the differences
between Mafia-like organisational crime and organised crime in the Chinese context? If yes, what is the purpose of the users of this
euphemism?
This presentation briefly reviews English and Chinese literature about organised crime, summarises relevant conclusions, focuses
on Chinese academic research, law-making, and policing aspects of organised crime, outlines the basic spectrum of organised crime
in China, explores the challenges of organised crime and pitfalls in Chinese law, and finally proposes measures to prevent and combat
organised crime in China.
Friday 14th August: 12.30pm – 1.30pm (sandwich lunch available from 12.15pm). RSVP (for catering purposes) to
ceps@anu.edu.au.
The Arndt Room (seminar room B), block 7, level 1, H.C. Coombs Building, Fellows Road, ANU (reference D2 on the ANU
campus map).
Seminar: ‘Pathways to peace by peace-building’
RegNet visitor, Commander
(PPF) Denis McDermott APM, former Deputy Commissioner to UNPOL – the UN Police in East Timor, and
former Chief Police Officer of the Australian Capital Territory.
The Participating Police Force (PPF) is the overseas police contingent deployed through the Regional
Assistance Mission to Solomon Islands (RAMSI). Since its creation in 2003, the PPF has always been commanded by an officer of the Australian
Federal Police (AFP), who is also sworn in as the Deputy Commissioner of the Solomon Islands Police Force (SIPF). Denis McDermott
was commander of the PPF from July 2007 until June 2009.
Read
a short biography of Denis McDermott APM » (PDF 44KB)
Monday 17th August: 12.30pm – 1.30pm (sandwich lunch available from 12.15pm). RSVP (for catering purposes) to
ceps@anu.edu.au.
Seminar Room 1.04, ground floor, H.C. Coombs Building Extension, Fellows Road, ANU (reference D2 on the ANU
campus map).
Seminar: ‘The effects of face-to-face restorative justice conferencing on crime and victim outcomes: A Campbell Collaboration
review’
Dr
Heather Strang, Director of the Centre
for Restorative Justice, Regulatory Institutions Network, ANU; Deputy Director of the
Police
Executive Programme at the Institute of Criminology, University of Cambridge.
Tuesday 18th August: 12.30pm – 1.30pm (sandwich lunch available from 12.15pm). RSVP (for catering purposes) to ceps@anu.edu.au.
Seminar Room 1.04, ground floor, H.C. Coombs Building Extension, Fellows Road, ANU (reference D2 on the ANU
campus map).
Seminar: ‘Support for violent and non-violent tactics among Australian activists’
CEPS visitor, Dr Winnifred Louis of the School of Psychology, University of Queensland.
Biography:
Dr Winnifred Louis is a senior lecturer in the School of Psychology and
co-director of the Centre
for Research on Group Processes at the University of Queensland. Her research interests include intergroup relations and conflict, political
decision-making, collective action and power. She has published recently on the role of identity in terrorism and conflict
management.
Abstract:
This presentation examines the tactical choices of Australian activists, examining support for violence among these politically engaged
actors. The research aims to identify social psychological processes underpinning endorsement of violent tactics, which are proposed
to generalise to other contexts. In the Australian samples, there is an overwhelming rejection of violence as a tactic by most, as
one would expect. Quantitative models are used to distinguish the handful who do not repudiate violence from the majority who do.
The results support the critical importance of group identities and norms. The minority who did not strongly repudiate violence may
be distinguished by their membership to particular activist groups, and by the combination of two beliefs: that democratic protest
is ineffective, and that it is wrong to take action solely to assert a moral stance. The social psychology of this apparent defeatist
embrace of violence within some activist groups is discussed, along with distinctions and similarities in the processes which might
foster support for terrorism in Australia and abroad, and implications for conflict management.
Thursday 20th August: 3.30pm – 4.30pm (afternoon tea available from 3.15pm). RSVP (for catering purposes) to
ceps@anu.edu.au.
Seminar Room 1.04, ground floor, H.C. Coombs Building Extension, Fellows Road, ANU (reference D2 on the ANU
campus map).
Seminar: ‘Plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose? The War on Terror and Networks of Terrorism from George W. Bush to Barack Obama’
CEPS Partner Investigator, Professor
Michael Stohl, Professor and Chair of the Department of Communication at
the University of California, Santa Barbara.
Abstract:
The "Global War on Terror" commenced with President Bush's address to a joint session of Congress on September 20, 2001, with his much-cited
quote "Our war on terror begins with al Qaeda, but it does not end there. It will not end until every terrorist group of global reach has
been found, stopped and defeated." This seminar will explore the implications of the Bush counterterrorism approach and its results, and
what the new Obama administration has done to chart a new approach to counterterrorism. The seminar explores not only how Mr. Obama
has challenged and discarded Mr.
Bush's war metaphor and reasserted the primacy of a law and justice framework to conduct counterterrorism, but also, the
almost neglected question of how Mr. Obama's approach differs from that of Mr. Bush on assumptions about the global network of
terrorism that Mr. Bush identified as the target of the War, and what the implications are for a successful Obama administration
counter terrorism approach.
Monday 24th August: 12.30pm – 1.30pm (sandwich lunch available from 12.15pm). RSVP (for catering purposes) to ceps@anu.edu.au.
Seminar Room 1.04, ground floor, H.C. Coombs Building Extension, Fellows Road, ANU (reference D2 on the ANU
campus map).
Workshop: Illicit Organisations Project
The Illicit Organisations project of the CEPS ANU Program in Policing and Security will hold their third workshop, similar
to the one held in
March 2009, for
interested individuals to contribute to the project. The discussion panel will include international visitor Michael
Stohl (Professor and Chair of the Department of Communication at the University of California, Santa Barbara), who will also be presenting
a seminar prior to the workshop. Details of the discussion hypotheses for the workshop will be emailed to those who confirm their
attendance.
Monday 24th August: 2.00pm – 4.00pm (afternoon tea will be provided).
Seminar Room 1.04, ground floor, H. C. Coombs Building Extension, Fellows Road, ANU (reference D2 on the campus
map).
For catering purposes, please RSVP to ceps@anu.edu.au by
c.o.b. Monday 17thAugust.
Seminar: ‘In the heart of darkness? The ethics of defense funding for scholarly research on climate change and political
fragility in Africa’
CEPS Visiting Scholar, Dr
Catherine E. Weaver, Assistant Professor at the Lyndon
B. Johnson School of Public Affairs and Director of the Global Governance Program, Robert
S. Strauss Center for International Security and Law, at the University of Texas at Austin.
Biography:
Catherine (Kate) Weaver is currently an Assistant Professor at the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public
Affairs at the University of Texas at Austin. Dr Weaver received her PhD in Political Science from the University
of Wisconsin-Madison in 2003. From 2001-2002, she was a Brookings Research Fellow in Foreign Policy Studies
at the Brookings Institution in Washington, D.C., and from 2002-2008 an Assistant Professor of Political Science
at the University of Kansas.
Dr Weaver's research focuses on the organisational culture, behaviour and reform of international financial institutions,
foremost the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund. Her book, ‘Hypocrisy Trap: The World Bank and the Poverty of Reform,’ was published by
Princeton University Press in November 2008. In addition to several book chapters, she has also published or will be publishing
articles in the journals Global Governance, Journal of International Relations and Development, Brown Journal of World
Affairs,
Review of International Political Economy, and New Political Economy. Dr Weaver is also the co-editor or
co-author of three forthcoming books, ‘The Politics of International Organizations: Bridging
the Rationalist-Constructivist Divide’ (with Alex Thompson and Michael J. Tierney), ‘International Political Economy
and the Transatlantic Divide’ (with Nicola Phillips), and ‘Theory and Practice of International Organizations’
(with Michael Lipson and Michael Mosser), and is currently a co-editor for the journal Review
of International Political Economy, and serves on the editorial advisory boards for the journal Poverty
and Public Policy, the New Millennium Books Series of Rowman & Littlefield Press, and the Routledge/University of Warwick
Studies in Globalisation book series. Dr Weaver is currently working on a new book, entitled ‘The Paradox of
Accountability: Transparency, Evaluation and the IO Learning Curve.’
In addition to being an Assistant Professor at the LBJ School, Dr Weaver is a Fellow and Director of the Global Governance
Program for the Robert S. Strauss Center for International Security and Law at the University of Texas. She
is currently a core researcher in a $7.6 million U.S. Department of Defense Minerva Project Grant on Political
Instability and Climate Change in Africa.
Dr Weaver received the Chadwick Alger Prize for Best Book on International Organizations and Multilateralism, International
Studies Association in February 2009 for her book ‘Hypocrisy Trap: The World Bank and the Poverty of Reform’ (Princeton
University Press 2008).
Download Dr Weaver's research statement » (PDF
121KB)
Abstract:
In 2008, the United States Department of Defense (DoD) issued a call for proposals to all US universities to solicit collaborative
multi-year, multi-million dollar research programs on topics relevant to emerging threats to US national security
(the Minerva Initiative). This coincided with the controversy
surrounding the military's use of academic scholars (foremost anthropologists) in conflict zones in Afghanistan and Iraq. At a time
when university budgets and grant resources were (and continue to be) drying up, the DoD’s call
was met with responses ranging from guarded optimism to outrage. A heated debate erupted with academia regarding whether or not
scholars should accept funding or work with the US military, how the resulting research would be used (and by whom), and whether
or not the terms of the proposals would violate any scholarly ethics. Dr Weaver, a core researcher in one of the seven final Minerva
Initiatives Awards, will discuss these difficult issues and the more general debate surrounding scholars' work with the military
in the US. She will also present and solicit feedback on the USD 7.6 million five-year grant awarded to the University of Texas at Austin
on “Climate Change
and State Fragility in Africa.”
Tuesday 25th August: 3.30pm – 4.30pm (afternoon tea available from 3.15pm). RSVP (for catering purposes) to
ceps@anu.edu.au.
Seminar Room 1.04, ground floor, H.C. Coombs Building Extension, Fellows Road, ANU (reference D2 on the ANU
campus map).
Seminar: ‘Patterns of urban conflict in East Timor: The implications for peacebuilding and policing’
CEPS Visitor, James Scambary, has been researching gangs and urban conflict in East Timor since 2006 and has recently
conducted an urban violence assessment there for the World Bank.
Abstract:
Informed by conversations with NGOs involved in mediation and also Australian peacekeeping forces in Dili, this presentation will focus
on the patterns and dynamics of urban conflict in East Timor, with some practical implications for policing and peacebuilding.
Monday 31st August: 12.30pm – 1.30pm (sandwich lunch available from 12.15pm). RSVP (for catering purposes) to
ceps@anu.edu.au.
The Arndt Room (seminar room B), block 7, level 1, H.C. Coombs Building, Fellows Road, ANU (reference D2 on the ANU
campus map).
Listen to a podcast of this presentation » (26.91MB 01:18:22)
Conference: ‘Indigenous young people, crime and justice’
An event hosted by the Australian Institute of Criminology
(AIC), a CEPS industry partner.
The Australian Institute of Criminology (AIC) in partnership
with the NSW Commission for Children and Young People, the NSW Attorney-General’s Department and
the Australian Human Rights Commission will host a national conference
on Indigenous young people, crime and justice.
This conference aims to identify and share the research and practice most relevant to addressing the problem of overrepresentation
of Indigenous young people in the criminal justice system. It has a major focus on Indigenous children and young people who interact
with the criminal justice system early and/or repeatedly, who are likely to have complex needs, and who require highly targeted and
joined up responses across the justice and other interrelated systems such as education, child protection, family support, and cultural
services.
Read more about this conference from the AIC website »
Download an invitation to the conference » (PDF 0.8MB)
Download the Call For Papers brochure » (PDF 0.8MB)
Monday 31st August – Tuesday 1st September. Full price conference registrations are open until 27th August.
Crowne Plaza Hotel, 30 Phillip Street, Parramatta, NSW.
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September 2009
2009 ARACY Conference: ‘Transforming Australia for our children's future: Making prevention work’
This conference, hosted by the Australian Research Alliance for Children and Youth (ARACY), will focus on how we can best
learn from one another and work together to innovate and take action to improve outcomes for young Australians. The conference aims
to build links between international and national experts, researchers, policy makers, practitioners, social entrepreneurs, marketers, business
and financiers. It will explore pathways to success, and showcase preventive innovations that are improving the lives of children and young
people.
Confirmed speakers include:
- The Honourable Alan Milburn, MP, UK;
- Professor Fiona Stanley AC, ARACY Executive Director, ARACY Board Member;
- Dr Ken Henry, Secretary to the Treasury;
- Professor Mick Dodson AM, Director of the National Centre for Indigenous Studies at the Australian National University, and the 2009
Australian of the Year.
Read more about this event on the conference website »
Wednesday 2nd – Friday 4th September. Call for abstract submissions is open until 7th May. Standard
registration is open 17th July – 26th August 2009; late registration applies thereafter.
Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre, Normanby Road, Melbourne, Victoria.
Seminar: ‘When policing is bad for business: Experiences in PNG’
CEPS visitor, Professor
Mark Findlay, Director of the Institute
of Criminology, The University of Sydney.
Biography:
Mark Findlay is the Director of the Institute
of Criminology. Previously Head of Department of the Sydney
Law School in 1998-1999, and Pro Dean in 1999, Mark currently holds a research Chair at Nottingham Law School, Nottingham Trent University. He is also a Senior Associate Research Fellow at
the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, University of London. An experienced
socio-legal researcher, Professor Findlay has worked as a research consultant for international agencies, governments and private
consortia in many jurisdictions. He has recently undertaken consultancy work for AusAID, reviewing the law and justice sector in
PNG. Professor Findlay is the joint chair of the International Criminal Trial Project, which is helping shape the face of international
criminal justice. His new book "Transforming International Criminal Justice" (Willan
Publishing (UK), 2005) is contributing to the reconciliation of retributive and restorative justice paradigms internationally.
Abstract:
The presentation will discuss the recent business community crime survey administered in Port Moresby, against the background of
a number of more general community crime surveys with ‘policing satisfaction’ components. This will give rise to discussion concerning:
- Community/policing/business engagement;
- Reluctance in reporting due to unsatisfactory service delivery;
- ‘Self help policing’;
- Failure of police/business/community compacts for crime prevention;
- Engagement as the answer; and
- Reflections on a pacific policing model.
It is anticipated that the experience of policing business crime within a dysfunctional business market serviced by a dysfunctional
state policing service will provide a ‘worst case’ model for challenges to engagement.
Download a working paper on this topic: 'Policing Business Confidence?
Controlling Crime Victimisation in Papua New Guinea' by Mark Findlay (PDF, 0.23MB).
Tuesday 8th September: 12.30pm – 1.30pm (sandwich lunch available from 12.15pm). RSVP (for catering purposes) to
ceps@anu.edu.au.
Seminar Room 1.04, ground floor, H.C. Coombs Building Extension, Fellows Road, ANU (reference D2 on the ANU
campus map).
Seminar: ‘G2 but no EU? What a China-US strategic partnership would mean for Europe’
CEPS visitor, Dr Gudrun Wacker, Senior Research Fellow at the
Research
Division Asia, Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik (SWP), the German Institute for International and Security Affairs, Berlin.
Download Dr Wacker's
CV » (PDF 0.94MB)
Download an event brochure » (PDF 4.89MB)
Tuesday 29th September: 2.00pm – 3.30pm. No RSVP is required.
Finkel Theatre, John Curtin School of Medical Research, Garran Road, ANU (reference C4 on the ANU
campus map).
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October 2009
Conference: ‘Dealing with uncertainties in policing serious crime’
This one-day conference is being hosted by the ‘Integrate
and Implement’ node of CEPS, which is based at the
National Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health (NCEPH) at The Australian National University.
The conference aims to enhance policing effectiveness by catalysing research into the neglected area of how uncertainties are understood and managed in
the policing of serious crime. The presenters are a select invited group of senior researchers and practitioners. The conference will
help policing researchers, senior police and policing agency managers answer questions such as “How
can police make effective decisions when information is limited?”; “How does confirmation bias affect investigations, and how
can we overcome it?” and “Why
do certainties in policing seem uncertain in court?”.
For more information and registration, download the conference
brochure or visit the
conference website.
Thursday 8th October: 9.00am – 6.00pm. Early bird registration of $250 closes on 23rd August.
Bob Douglas Theatre, National Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health (NCEPH), Building 62a, Eggleston Road, ANU (reference C3 on the
ANU
campus map).
Seminar: ‘After the war on drugs’
CEPS visitor, Dr
Norm Stamper, former Chief of the Seattle Police Department and one of the leading lights of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP), a drug-policy-reform group.
Dr Stamper is a major proponent of significant drug law reform, believing that the “war on drugs” has actually been a war on people. Having
served as a police officer for 34 years, and Chief of the Seattle Police Department from 1998 to 2000, Norm Stamper is one of the
strongest voices in the US advocating legalisation of illicit drugs.
Dr Stamper will be presenting his views on drug law reform, including:
- Regulated legalisation of all drugs to make neighborhoods and communities safer and healthier;
- An examination of the failed approach in the US, with billions of dollars – almost $69 billion/year – being wasted on federal,
state and local police, courts, prosecutors, prisons, probation, parole and other punishment-related programs.
Dr Stamper has also recently released a book entitled “Breaking
Rank: A Top Cop's Exposé of the Dark Side of American Policing.”
Monday 26th October: 12.30pm – 1.30pm (sandwich lunch available from 12.15pm). RSVP (for catering purposes) to
ceps@anu.edu.au.
Seminar Room 1.13, ground floor, H. C. Coombs Building Extension, Fellows Road, ANU (reference D2 on the campus
map).
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November 2009
Conference: ‘Child protection as regulation: Clarifying principles’
The Regulatory Institutions Network (RegNet) at
The australian National University, will host a 2-day conference in conjunction with the
Institute
of Child Protection Studies at the Australian Catholic University, Canberra, with the support of the Australian Research Council and the ACT
Department of Disability, Housing and Community Services.
Approaching child protection as a form of regulation is a fairly uncommon approach. By bringing together international and national child protection and regulatory
scholars, this conference aims to elicit new thinking about the principles that governments and other actors might wish to endorse
in their approaches to child protection. The conference seeks to stimulate debate about the aims of and justifications for intervening
and the role of families and communities in child protection.
Download a flyer and program for this event » (PDF, 93KB)
Thursday 5th – Friday 6th November. This event is free of charge, and seating is limited to 50
so RSVP is essential. RSVP to Mary Ivec on mary.ivec@anu.edu.au or
(T) 02 6125 4438.
Lecture Room 2, ground floor, Hedley Bull Centre, cnr Liversidge Street and Garran Road, ANU (reference D2 on the campus
map).
Seminar: ‘Vulnerable people policing: inclusion or exclusion of target groups’
An event hosted by the Australian Institute of Criminology
(AIC), a CEPS industry partner.
Dr Isabelle Bartkowiak-Théron is a lecturer
in policing and applied criminology at Charles Sturt University, and currently also works on a community policing project with
the Australian Institute of Criminology. Her most recent publications focus on participatory and restorative justice and community
policing.
Full details are available from the event brochure (PDF, 42KB) and the
AIC
website.
Tuesday 17th November: 11.00am – 12.00pm. Please RSVP by Monday 16 November to aic.events@aic.gov.au.
Australian Institute of Criminology, 74 Leichhardt Street, Griffith, ACT.
Seminar: ‘The limits of investigative examinations of suspects in criminal proceedings’
Group of Eight Fellow and RegNet Visiting Research
Fellow, Professor Arkadiusz Lach, Department
of Criminal Procedure, Faculty of Law and Administration, University of Nicolaus Copernicus (Poland).
Read more about Professor
Lach on the Visitor's page »
Abstract:
Both traditional and modern investigative methods and forensic tests used in criminal proceedings allow for extraction of plenty of
information from the human body. This seminar will focus on the limits on acquiring information from suspects in the light of the
privilege against self – incrimination and the right to privacy.
Thursday 19th November: 12.30pm – 1.30pm (sandwich lunch available from 12.15pm). RSVP (for catering purposes) to
ceps@anu.edu.au.
The Arndt Room (seminar room B), block 7, level 1, H.C. Coombs Building, Fellows Road, ANU (reference D2 on the ANU
campus map).
2009 ANZSOC Conference: ‘Crime and justice challenges in the 21st Century: Victims, offenders and communities’
The 2009 Australian and New Zealand Society of Criminology (ANZSOC) conference aims to encapsulate several enduring issues
facing criminal justice researchers and practitioners in the early 21st Century.
For more information and registration, visit the conference website »
Sunday 22nd – Wednesday 25th November. Call for papers is now closed. Registration will be open until the close
of business on Friday 20th November, and on any day of the conference.
University of Western Australia, Perth, WA.
Seminar: ‘Deterring corrupt senior political figures through international anti-money laundering norms’
CEPS visitor, Dr
David Chaikin, Senior Lecturer, Business Law Program, Faculty
of Economics and Business, The University of Sydney.
Biography:
Dr David Chaikin LLB/B Com (UNSW), LLM (Yale), PhD in Law (Cambridge) is a senior lecturer in business law in the Faculty of Economics and Business at the University of Sydney, and a practising lawyer specialising
in transnational litigation. He has worked as a consultant with the Financial Action Task Force and the Asia/Pacific Group on Money Laundering, and has held senior positions in the Australian
Attorney-General’s Department and the Commonwealth
Secretariat. Dr Chaikin spent seven years assisting the government of the Philippines in tracking and
recovering the illicit assets of former President Ferdinand Marcos. His book, “Corruption and Money Laundering: A Symbiotic Relationship,”
co-authored with Professor Jason Sharman, was published in 2009.
Abstract:
Corrupt political elites are one of the most significant obstacles to economic development and good governance. Financial institutions
in a globalised economy may facilitate grand corruption by providing money laundering services. A new idea is that International
Anti-Money Laundering systems may be used to prevent the laundering of corrupt proceeds. There is evidence of emerging international norms
subjecting Politically Exposed Persons or Senior Public Figures to Anti-Money Laundering rules. The implementation and effectiveness of these
norms will be assessed through state practice.
Monday 30th November: 12.30pm – 1.30pm (sandwich lunch available from 12.15pm). RSVP (for catering purposes) to
ceps@anu.edu.au.
Lecture Room 3, ground floor, Hedley Bull Centre, cnr Liversidge Street and Garran Road, ANU (reference D2 on the campus
map).
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December 2009
Seminar: ‘Gatekeepers: The role of non-state actors in governance of the waterfront’
Mr
Russell Brewer, PhD scholar at The Australian National University program of CEPS, and an Adjunct Research Associate in the School
of Law at Flinders University.
Russell’s doctoral research examines current law enforcement responses to transnational organised crime on the waterfront.
More specifically, his research investigates the governmental use of private sector 'partnerships' as a means of enhancing public
policy, regulatory and law enforcement capacity. As such, this work explores the manner in which state actors (e.g. Customs, police
and transport regulators) and non-state actors (e.g. port authorities, private security, stevedores and unions) come together to
identify and respond to unlawful activities occurring at maritime ports.
This seminar constitutes Russell's 18-month candidature review, so audience feedback is encouraged.
Thursday 3rd December: 12.30pm – 1.30pm (sandwich lunch available from 12.15pm). RSVP (for catering purposes) to
ceps@anu.edu.au.
Seminar Room A, block 7, ground floor, H.C. Coombs Building, Fellows Road, ANU (reference D2 on the
ANU
campus map).
Seminar: ‘Governing security in the global economy: A criminological framework’
CEPS visitor, Dr Alison Wakefield, Senior Lecturer in Criminology, School of Social Sciences and International Studies,
University of New South Wales.
Abstract:
Global political and economic transformations are changing the security landscape, and criminology has much to contribute to our understanding
of contemporary security challenges and how these are to be addressed. The terrorist attacks in the US on 11 September 2001 placed security
at the top of public agendas worldwide, yet it was the abrupt end of the Cold War a decade earlier that swiftly removed the uneasy equilibrium
holding together the international system, allowing a much more complex and interconnected set of risks to proliferate. Globalisation
has simultaneously brought about a revolution in trade, communication and travel which has come increasingly to be shadowed by the expansion
of transnational terrorist and criminal networks and an increasing vulnerability of states to regional conflicts, pandemics and other security
challenges that national borders cannot contain. Such rapid social change has necessitated a fundamental and ongoing metamorphosis in
international and national security architectures to address the proliferation of threats, blurring operational boundaries between agencies
and requiring national and international agencies to work much more closely together. It has also confounded the traditional boundaries of
academic disciplines, requiring criminology to engage much more closely with fields such as international relations and development studies
in explaining, defining and addressing contemporary security problems in a global context. This paper will present the beginnings of a criminological
framework for making sense of contemporary developments in security and policing from the international level through to the local.
Friday 4th December: 12.30pm – 1.30pm (sandwich lunch available from 12.15pm). RSVP (for catering purposes) to
ceps@anu.edu.au.
Seminar Room A, block 7, ground floor, H.C. Coombs Building, Fellows Road, ANU (reference D2 on the
ANU
campus map).
Seminar: ‘Exploring terra incognita: Family values and prostitution acceptance in China’
CEPS Visiting Scholar, Dr Liqun Cao, Professor of Sociology and Criminology, Faculty of Criminology, Justice and Policy Studies, University of Ontario Institute
of Technology.
Biography:
Dr Liqun Cao, PhD (1993) is a Professor of Sociology and Criminology. His research interests include comparative
studies, criminological theory, gun ownership, and policing. His research essays have appeared in many national and international
journals, including the top journals of Criminology, Justice Quarterly, Journal of Criminal Justice, and Policing.
His co-authored paper won the Donal MacNamara Award of Academy of Criminal Justice Science in 2008. In addition, he published
the monograph ‘Major Criminological Theories: Concepts
and Measurement’ and co-edited the anthology ‘Lessons From International/Comparative
Criminology/Criminal Justice’ in 2004. He also writes in Chinese and his co-authored book ‘The Empirical Status of Major Criminological
Theories’ was published in Chinese with Professor Susyan Jou in 2007. He co-edited an anthology "Criminology" in Chinese with Professor
Xin Ren in 2008.
Abstract:
One of the unexamined issues in China is the public attitude toward prostitution. Little is known about public opinion on prostitution
in Asia and no work exists regarding the association between family values and public opinion on prostitution. Data from the
World Values Surveys are used to explore social
determinants of the attitudes toward prostitution with a focus on the relationship between family values and acceptance of prostitution
in China. The results from the multivariate logistic regression show that pro-family values are a significant predictor of the attitude
toward prostitution, independent of tolerance, feminism, authoritarianism, and employment. The effects of feminism and authoritarianism
are inconsistent with the literature in the U.S. although the effect of tolerance is consistent. This article concludes with a call
for reevaluation of the current Chinese policy in order to gain a better control of prostitution.
Liqun Cao, Criminology, Justice and Policy Studies, University of Ontario Institute of Technology, and Steven Stack, Wayne State University.
Tuesday 8th December: 12.30pm – 1.30pm (sandwich lunch available from 12.15pm). RSVP (for catering purposes) to
ceps@anu.edu.au.
Lecture Room 3, ground floor, Hedley Bull Centre, cnr Liversidge Street and Garran Road, ANU (reference D2 on the campus
map).
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