Citation: S. Wachholz et B. Miedema, Risk, fear, harm: Immigrant women's perceptions of the "policing solution'' to woman abuse, CRIME LAW S, 34(3), 2000, pp. 301-317
Citation: Dr. Liddick, Campaign fund-raising abuses and money laundering in recent US elections: Criminal networks in action, CRIME LAW S, 34(2), 2000, pp. 111-157
Citation: Ks. Williams et C. Johnstone, The politics of the selective gaze: Closed Circuit Television and the policing of public space, CRIME LAW S, 34(2), 2000, pp. 183-210
Citation: Le. Day et M. Vandiver, Criminology and genocide studies: Notes on what might have been and what still could be, CRIME LAW S, 34(1), 2000, pp. 43-59
Citation: Jm. Steiner, The role margin as the site for moral and social intelligence: The case ofGermany and National Socialism, CRIME LAW S, 34(1), 2000, pp. 61-75
Citation: Fm. Afflitto, Victimization, survival and the impunity of forced exile: A case study from the Rwandan genocide, CRIME LAW S, 34(1), 2000, pp. 77-97
Citation: R. Lippens et P. Van Calster, Crime, accidents and (dis)organization: Rhizomic communications on/of a foodscare, CRIME LAW S, 33(4), 2000, pp. 281-311
Citation: Ah. Joffe, The environmental legacy of Saddam Husayn: The archaeology of totalitarianism in modern Iraq, CRIME LAW S, 33(4), 2000, pp. 313-328
Citation: Aw. Mccoy, Coercion and its unintended consequences: A study of heroin trafficking inSoutheast and South West Asia, CRIME LAW S, 33(3), 2000, pp. 191-224
Citation: G. Cleaver, Subcontracting military power: The privatisation of security in contemporary Sub-Saharan Africa, CRIME LAW S, 33(1-2), 2000, pp. 131-149