Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: http://dspace.mj.gov.br/handle/1/8077
Autor(es): Costardi, Carla Maria de Oliveira.
Título: The institutionalisation of the multilateral police cooperation in the americas: a bottom-up approach to the pathway of an informal government network
Título(s) alternativo(s): Institucionalização da cooperação policial multilateral nas américas: um enfoque de baixo para cima do caminho de uma rede governamental informal
Institucionalización de la cooperación policial multilateral en las américas: un enfoque de abajohacia arribadela trayectoria de una red gubernamental informal
Data da publicação: 2022-01
Fonte de publicação: Revista brasileira de ciências policiais, v. 13, n. 7, p. 227-262, jan./abr. 2022
Editora: Academia Nacional de Polícia
Tipo: Artigo de revista
Resumo: The Police Community of America – AMERIPOL was created in 2007, at the 3rd Meeting of Directors, Commanders and Chiefs of Police of Latin America and the Caribbean that took place in Bogotá, Colombia. At the end of this meeting, official delegates of 15 national police institutions signed AMERIPOL’s bylaws. This decision led to the creation of a government network with broad cooperation faculties that – even without an international treaty – has operated since 2007 as a multilateral police cooperation mechanism. States did not oppose AMERIPOL, and several international organisations, the European Union, private actors and police institutions outside the Americas established cooperative alliances with it. The peculiar scenario where police forces – not States – lead the institutionalisation of multilateral police cooperation in the Americas begs the question: is it possible to reconcile the particular political conjuncture of creation and consolidation of AMERIPOL with international law? In this article, I sustain that the harmonisation of that specific political context and legal theory is, indeed, possible by articulating Anne-Marie Slaughter’s disaggregated state interpretation of the transnational agency of domestic government institutions with Janet K. Levit’s Bottom-Up Approach to International Lawmaking. This theoretical proposition reconciles AMERIPOL’s informal origins with the legitimacy needed to participate in any lawmaking process.
Palavras-chave: Polícia
Cooperação internacional
Segurança internacional
América
Direito internacional
Notas: Inclui notas explicativas, bibliográficas e bibliografia.
Aparece nas coleções:Revista Brasileira de Ciências Policiais - RBCP

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