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  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID188387
Title ProperSmuggling and Border Enforcement
LanguageENG
AuthorTajima, Yuhki ;  Yuhki Tajima ;  Kim, Diana
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article analyzes the efficacy of border enforcement against smuggling. We argue that walls, fences, patrols, and other efforts to secure porous borders can reduce smuggling, but only in the absence of collusion between smugglers and state agents at official border crossings. When such corruption occurs, border enforcement merely diverts smuggling flows without reducing their overall volume. We also identify the conditions under which corruption occurs and characterize border enforcement as a sorting mechanism that allows high-skilled smugglers to forge alternative border-crossing routes while deterring low-skilled smugglers or driving them to bribe local border agents. Combining a formal model and an archival case study of opium smuggling in Southeast Asia, we demonstrate that border enforcement has conditional effects on the routes and volumes of smuggling, depending on the nature of interactions between smugglers and border agents. By drawing attention to the technological and organizational aspects of smuggling, this article brings scholarship on criminal governance into the study of international relations, and contributes to debates on the effects of border enforcement and border politics more generally.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Organization Vol. 76, No.4; Fall 2022: p.830 - 867
Journal SourceInternational Organization Vol: 76 No 4
Key WordsGlobalization ;  Migration ;  Smuggling ;  Borders ;  Transnational organized crime ;  Corruption ;  Mixed Methods ;  Criminal Governance ;  Archival Research ;  Border Walls ;  formal methods


 
 
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